Weather Underground Forecast for Tuesday,March 1,2016
A low pressure system will bring impacts to the eastern half of the country on Tuesday, while a Pacific system slams into the West Coast.
An area of low pressure will strengthen as it pushes east northeastward across the middle Mississippi Valley, the Ohio Valley and the Mid-Atlantic. This system will draw copious amounts of moisture from the Gulf of Mexico, which will fuel strong to severe thunderstorms. Severe thunderstorms will be possible in a handful of states, including northern Louisiana, Arkansas, southeast Missouri, Mississippi, Alabama, northwest Georgia, Tennessee, Tennessee, Kentucky, southwest West Virginia, southern Ohio, southern Indian and southeast Illinois. These thunderstorms will be capable of producing large hail, dangerous straight line winds and isolated tornadoes. A mixture of rain, freezing rain and snow will also spread across the upper Mississippi Valley, the upper Midwest and the Northeast. Heavy snow and freezing rain will develop in northern Indiana, northern Ohio, southeast Michigan, northwest Pennsylvania, western New York and northwest New England.
Meanwhile, a Pacific low pressure system will move onshore over British Columbia. A cold frontal boundary associated with this system will generate moderate to heavy rain and high elevation snow across the Pacific Northwest. Light to moderate precipitation will also spread across northern California, the northern Great Basin and the upper Intermountain West. High pressure will influence a warm and dry weather pattern over the Southwest on Tuesday.
A low pressure system will bring impacts to the eastern half of the country on Tuesday, while a Pacific system slams into the West Coast.
An area of low pressure will strengthen as it pushes east northeastward across the middle Mississippi Valley, the Ohio Valley and the Mid-Atlantic. This system will draw copious amounts of moisture from the Gulf of Mexico, which will fuel strong to severe thunderstorms. Severe thunderstorms will be possible in a handful of states, including northern Louisiana, Arkansas, southeast Missouri, Mississippi, Alabama, northwest Georgia, Tennessee, Tennessee, Kentucky, southwest West Virginia, southern Ohio, southern Indian and southeast Illinois. These thunderstorms will be capable of producing large hail, dangerous straight line winds and isolated tornadoes. A mixture of rain, freezing rain and snow will also spread across the upper Mississippi Valley, the upper Midwest and the Northeast. Heavy snow and freezing rain will develop in northern Indiana, northern Ohio, southeast Michigan, northwest Pennsylvania, western New York and northwest New England.
Meanwhile, a Pacific low pressure system will move onshore over British Columbia. A cold frontal boundary associated with this system will generate moderate to heavy rain and high elevation snow across the Pacific Northwest. Light to moderate precipitation will also spread across northern California, the northern Great Basin and the upper Intermountain West. High pressure will influence a warm and dry weather pattern over the Southwest on Tuesday.
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