Weather Underground Forecast for Friday,April 1,2016
A stormy weather pattern will impact the Southeast on Friday, while a ridge of high pressure builds over the West Coast.
A cold frontal boundary will stretch south southwestward across the eastern Great Lakes, the Appalachians, the Deep South and the western Gulf Coast. This frontal system will collide with warm and moist air from the Gulf of Mexico. This interaction will produce heavy rain and strong thunderstorms across the Gulf Coast, the Southeast and the Mid-Atlantic. Severe thunderstorms will be possible in southeast Louisiana, southern Mississippi, southern Alabama, Georgia and the Florida Panhandle. These thunderstorms will be capable of producing large hail, dangerous straight line winds and isolated tornadoes. In addition, heavy rain will bring threats of flash flooding to central North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, the Florida Panhandle, southern Alabama, southern Mississippi and southern Louisiana. Showers and thunderstorms are also expected for the northern Mid-Atlantic and eastern New England, while a mixture of rain and snow affects northwest New England.
Meanwhile, mixed precipitation is forecast to develop across the northern Plains and the upper Midwest as a weak area of low pressure drifts across the region.
A trough of low pressure will shift eastward over the Southwest. Rain and high elevation snow will occur across parts of the Desert Southwest and the southern Rockies. High pressure will keep weather conditions mostly dry west of the Continental Divide.
A stormy weather pattern will impact the Southeast on Friday, while a ridge of high pressure builds over the West Coast.
A cold frontal boundary will stretch south southwestward across the eastern Great Lakes, the Appalachians, the Deep South and the western Gulf Coast. This frontal system will collide with warm and moist air from the Gulf of Mexico. This interaction will produce heavy rain and strong thunderstorms across the Gulf Coast, the Southeast and the Mid-Atlantic. Severe thunderstorms will be possible in southeast Louisiana, southern Mississippi, southern Alabama, Georgia and the Florida Panhandle. These thunderstorms will be capable of producing large hail, dangerous straight line winds and isolated tornadoes. In addition, heavy rain will bring threats of flash flooding to central North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, the Florida Panhandle, southern Alabama, southern Mississippi and southern Louisiana. Showers and thunderstorms are also expected for the northern Mid-Atlantic and eastern New England, while a mixture of rain and snow affects northwest New England.
Meanwhile, mixed precipitation is forecast to develop across the northern Plains and the upper Midwest as a weak area of low pressure drifts across the region.
A trough of low pressure will shift eastward over the Southwest. Rain and high elevation snow will occur across parts of the Desert Southwest and the southern Rockies. High pressure will keep weather conditions mostly dry west of the Continental Divide.
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