More Heavy Mountain Snow in the West
A storm plowing into the central Rockies will dump several more inches of snow over the mountains of the West into the central Rockies, while rain falls at lower elevations.

Over a foot and a half of snow has piled up over some of the mountains of California, and up to an additional 3-6 inches could fall over the Sierra through tonight. Snow has whitened unusually low elevations for this time of the year with plenty of cold air in supply.
An inch of snow fell 3 miles ENE of Myers Flat, Calif., at an elevation of 1,090 feet on Sunday. A total of 4.5 inches of snow fell 8 miles south of Maple Creek, Calif., at an elevation of 2,500 feet.
Snow will continue falling into tonight all the way southward into the mountains of Southern California, above elevations of 4,500 feet.

Up to 3-6 inches of snow will pile up over portions of the northern and central Rockies, including in the Wasatch Range of Utah. By tonight, Salt Lake City will get light accumulations of snow.
Gusty winds through the mountains in the West and the Rockies will also further create dangerous travel conditions by blowing snow around and reducing visibility.
Meanwhile, rain will continue to dampen lower elevations from California into the Four Corners Region.
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Daily U.S. Extremes
past 24 hours
| Extreme | Location | |
|---|---|---|
| High | 113° | Death Valley, CA |
| Low | 30° | Bellemont, AZ |
| Precip | 9.70" | Miami, FL |
WeatherWhys®
A large, horrific tornado struck the city of Joplin, Mo., last year on this date. The twister cut a deadly path across the south side of the city, leaving over 159 dead and at least 1,150 injured. The Joplin tornado currently ranks as the 7th deadliest tornado in U.S. history.
This Day In Weather History
New Hampshire (1814)
A tornado crossed Merrimac, Litchfield, Londonderry and North Chester. The same storm produced hailstones that had an 11-inch circumference and weighed 1/2 pound.
Northeast (1989)
More rain in an already wet month. Monthly totals topped 11 inches at New York City, 9 inches at Bridgeport, Conn., and 8 inches at Baltimore (all three totals set records for May).












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