Hundreds of roads were closed in Missouri, Arkansas and Illinois over the weekend as dangerous weather system rolled in with strong winds and heavy rain. Some areas saw as much as 280 mm (11 inches). The rain caused a sudden rise in rivers, some of which already reached historic levels before the next round of heavy rain hits the region. The nation's biggest rivers are flooding, too.
As of 21:00 UTC on May 3, 31 river gauges reported major flooding, 96 moderate, 160 minor and 233 near flood stage. Most of them in Missouri, Arkansas, and Illinois.
A mandatory evacuation order was issued Tuesday, May 2, 2017, for the east part of the town of Pocahontas (population 6 500) in Arkansas, some 201 km (125 miles) northeast of Little Rock, as the Black River rose to nearly 9 m (29 feet), a record.
"This is a historical crest. The levees weren't designed for overtopping," Randolph County Judge David Jansen said. "When they go, we're going to have a wall of water pouring out." On Wednesday, the levee on the Black River at Pocahontas failed and water gushed into the town.
Significant flooding is expected by the end of the week on the Mississippi River south of St. Louis, Missouri, including the towns of Cape Girardeau, Missouri, and Cairo, Illinois, as the massive amounts of water move downstream. Forecasters say the Mississippi River at Cape Girardeau is on track to crest at just over 15 m (48 feet) on May 6, which would be a near record.
Several points on the Missouri River in eastern Missouri are expected to rise 3 m (10 feet) above flood stage or higher by the end of the week.
St. Louis County officials say 200 homes along the Meramec have been damaged in the flooding and another 1 500 are potentially in harm's way.
Residents of West Alton (population 500), 32 km (20 miles) north of St. Louis on the Missouri River are being asked to evacuate today as authorities fear a breach of a nearby levee.
Another levee breached in Franklin County, southwest of the city, early Wednesday, but flooding mostly affected farmland, The Weather Channel reported.
The flooding has forced Missouri transportation officials to close Interstate 55, along with other major routes Wednesday, effectively cutting off St. Louis from any roads to the southeast.
According to Missouri transportation officials, I-55 closed at 12:00 local time Wednesday after rising water levels on the Meramec River inundated numerous roads. MoDot says the roads will remain closed for the remainder of the week. A 92-km (57 miles) stretch of I-44 from central to southern Missouri is also closed, along with a 37-km (23 miles) stretch in suburban St. Louis.
Along the Meramec River, in suburban St. Louis, thousands of sandbags are protecting homes and businesses in Eureka, and authorities fear a breach on a levee in nearby Valley Park where the river crested at just over 13 m (43 feet) on May 2, just shy of a record.
"After flooding smashed records that had stood for over 100 years, more heavy rain is headed toward the Ozarks and mid-Mississippi Valley, bringing a threat of renewed flash flooding and adding to already swollen rivers and reservoirs," says weather.com senior meteorologist Jon Erdman. So far, 14 flooding records have been broken and several more are expected in the coming days, Erdman said.
Forecast
A slow moving and intensifying weather system is drawing deep moisture from the Gulf of Mexico, NWS forecasters said today. Heavy rain on top of major-to-record flooding is prolonging and worsening flood conditions, and producing flash floods in some areas.
Heavy rains will move into the southeast Gulf and Ohio Valley Thursday. Severe thunderstorms along the central gulf states moves into the Southeastern US Thursday.
bron: https://watchers.news/2017/05/03/missouri-arkansas-flood-may-2017/
Satellite views of historic Central U.S. #flooding
— Simon Gascoin (@sgascoin) 3 mei 2017
Near Poplar Bluff MO, Pocahontas AR
April, 24th 2017 vs. May 06th 2016 #sentinel2 #arwx pic.twitter.com/nlKScAWhJw
VIDEO: Unbelievable #flooding in and around #STLouis area; I-44 closed, @MoDOT reports 2 hour detours; More rain expected today #mowx pic.twitter.com/hXSvDGeBIM
— Dan Snyder (@DanSnyderFOX25) 3 mei 2017
NEW: Incredible #flooding right now in and around #STLouis area; @MoDOT_StLouis expected to close parts of I-55 soon #LiveDesk #mowx pic.twitter.com/pHAoJ9FTVS
— Dan Snyder (@DanSnyderFOX25) 3 mei 2017
The aerial views of historic Central U.S. #flooding are unreal https://t.co/W1C0iIRHAv via @washingtonpost #exwx pic.twitter.com/HQvAfGwOkQ
— Climate Nexus (@ClimateNexus) 4 mei 2017
As historic #flooding continues in parts of the central U.S., it is vital to be prepared and have an action plan. LIVE coverage continues. pic.twitter.com/UXOb9lSwfB
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) 4 mei 2017
Here is an aerial view of the devastating #flooding in #Pocahontas, AR. WATCH> https://t.co/SIeBkhM2oI pic.twitter.com/cAdhtRD99K
— AMHQ (@AMHQ) 3 mei 2017
#Flood & #severe threat continues for part of central/S. U.S. We are LIVE streaming @weatherchannel for subscribers in TX, AR, LA. MO & IL. pic.twitter.com/VLYBe8WVCC
— Local Now (@LocalNowTWC) 3 mei 2017
#Flooding on #Pierrefonds Blvd near St Jean but this little ducky is going for a swim! Thanks to Brenda Gibson. pic.twitter.com/7wL7EsP6OW
— Lori Graham (@LGrahamCTV) 3 mei 2017
A quick drive-by of the #flooding from the Black River in #Pocahontas: pic.twitter.com/vZczKA1FiI
— David Lippman THV11 (@david_lippman) 3 mei 2017
Flooding in Maugerville & Sheffield NB.@weathernetwork @MurphTWN @JHarringtonTV @HarryForestell @kalinCBC @CindyDayCTV @SuzanneTWN #Flooding pic.twitter.com/ZlCymI4kNg
— My New Brunswick (@mynewbrunswick) 3 mei 2017
Major #flooding in Pierrefonds and Île Bizard overnight. What an ordeal for people in those neighbourhoods. (photos @ABelandRC) pic.twitter.com/dauQybADAg
— Kristy Snell CBC (@Snellk) 3 mei 2017
#Flooding wracks #Communities along Meramec more #Rain: https://t.co/D5ZBXC3k6m, https://t.co/GjCAQ4fJq6 pic.twitter.com/tBu8xyHcgO
— Science News (@ScienceTopNews) 4 mei 2017
Arkansas levee breaks, flooding historic town - Videos - CBS News CBS News Logo https://t.co/7IDoef80lM #Flooding
— World News Report (@robinsnewswire) 4 mei 2017