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An
early snowstorm that began last Friday set a record for
early snowfall in Wyoming's capital city of Cheyenne,
with 10.5 inches of snow by Sunday morning.
Thousands
of travelers spent Saturday night in impromptu shelters
set up throughout the state. After shutting down highways
and leaving travelers stranded, the storm continued on
to Colorado and Nebraska.
More
than 1,200 people who had been stranded in the cities
of Rock Springs and Rawlins for two days began their exodus
after 200 miles of Interstate 80 were reopened on Sunday.
Trucks that lined the sides of the highway combined with
automobiles trying to get out of town, caused serious
traffic jams. Don Brinkman, chairman of the Red Cross
branch in Carbon County, said, "We had 15 miles in
Rawlins that was nothing but a parking lot for trucks."
Brady
Fox of the American Red Cross said that the owners of
hundreds of tractor-trailers, campers and cars that lined
the interstate and Rawlins neighborhood streets were asked
not to park their rigs close together in order to avoid
accumulations of carbon monoxide.
The
storm dumped about 15 inches of snow in Colorado's northern
mountains and about six inches in the lower elevations
of the Front Range as it moved over the state on Sunday.
The western half of Nebraska was also left blanketed and
was predicted to continue experiencing freezing temperatures
through early Monday.
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