Weather Underground midday recap for Tuesday, July 30, 2013.
Active weather continued in the nation's mid-section of the nation on
Tuesday as an impulse over the South-Central Plains advanced into the
Mid-Mississippi Valley and the Ozarks. This disturbance, combined with
sufficient moisture over the region led to showers and thunderstorms
from parts of the Southern and Central Plains into the Mid-Mississippi
Valley into the western Ohio Valley. Heavy rainfall and strong storms
were likely from the eastern parts of Kansas and Oklahoma through
Missouri into southwestern Illinois. Meanwhile, energy ejecting from the
Central and Northern Rockies stirred up showers and strong to
potentially severe storms in parts of the Northern Plains. The Storm
Prediction Center issued a slight risk of severe storms for parts of the
central Dakotas into Nebraska through Tuesday night. While a few
tornadoes were possible in this region, large hail and damaging wind
gusts remained the main threats.
Elsewhere, a stalled frontal boundary over the Southeast aided in
producing scattered showers and thunderstorms in the southeastern corner
of the nation.
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