Weather Underground midday recap for Sunday, November 10,2013
A cold frontal boundary extended from the Pacific Northwest to the upper
Midwest on Sunday, while a separate cold front stretched from the
Carolinas to New England.
Low pressure off of the coast of Washington ushered wet weather into
parts of the Pacific Northwest on Sunday. Scattered showers pushed
across northern Washington, and light snow showers fell in the Cascades.
Temperatures ranged between the 40s and 50s throughout Washington and
Oregon. The Southwest stayed clear of wet weather on Sunday, as
temperatures ranged between the 60s and 70s inland.
A cold front stretched from eastern Washington to western Minnesota on
Sunday, which provided cool, snowy weather to the Intermountain West,
the northern Plains and the upper Midwest. Winter weather advisories and
winter storm warnings were issued across Montana as a result of this
cold frontal boundary. Pondera, Mont., reported a midday total of 6.0
inches of snow. Gunnison, Colo., recorded a morning low of 12 degrees on
Sunday.
The majority of the southern Plains and the Southeast stayed clear of
wet weather as a result of a high pressure system. The exception to this
was in Texas, where scattered showers and thunderstorms popped up
during the late morning and early afternoon.
Meanwhile, a cold front brought scattered showers to the Northeast, and snow showers to New Hampshire and Maine on Sunday.
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