(CNN) — Devastating weather that left 10 people dead over the weekend will make a dramatic encore.
Torrential rain will deluge parts of the Southeast this week as swaths of the Northwest will get walloped by feet of snow.
Heavy rain and flooding could slam the Southeast Monday and Tuesday, the National Weather Service said.
This news comes after The National Weather Service reported two tornadoes touched down in the Mid-South, both ending up in DeSoto County.
Those storms lead Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant to declare a state of the emergency.
“Some of the same areas impacted by the severe weather over this past weekend will see scattered showers and thunderstorms, hampering clean-up,” CNN meteorologist Gene Norman said Monday.
The storms will be slow-moving, “leading to persistent rains through Wednesday,” Norman said. The wet pattern for he Southeast will last through the end of the week as the heaviest rain will transition up to the Tennessee and Ohio Valley by Thursday into Friday.
The Southeast won’t just be wet — it’ll also be unusually warm.
“Record warm daily high and low temperatures will be possible in parts of the Southeast through Wednesday,” the National Weather Service said.
“Temperature anomalies on average will range between 10-20 degrees above normal across much of the Mid-Atlantic/Southeast and into the Central Appalachians.”
But in Montana and the western Dakotas, the high temperatures Monday and Tuesday are expected to stay below zero degrees.
Farther west, heavy snow will blanket much of Oregon and Washington.
“Snowfall will be measured in feet in the Cascades, the Northern Sierra Nevada, Northeast Oregon, Northern and Central Idaho, Western Wyoming, North-Central Utah, and the Colorado Rockies,” the National Weather Service said.
“Expect treacherous and icy travel conditions in these affected areas.”