Weather Underground Forecast for Monday,April 11,2016
A cold frontal boundary will move across the eastern half of the country on Monday, while a series of Pacific disturbances drifts over the western states.
A low pressure system will move in an eastward trajectory across the upper Great Lakes and southeast Canada. This system will usher a mixture of rain and snow over the upper Midwest and portions of the Northeast. A cold frontal boundary associated with this system will extend southwestward over the upper Midwest, the middle Mississippi Valley and the southern Plains. This frontal system will collide with warm and humid air from the Gulf of Mexico. The interaction will lead to numerous areas of showers and thunderstorms stretching from the southern Plains to the Mid-Atlantic. Severe thunderstorms will be possible in southeast Oklahoma, northeast Texas, northern Louisiana, Arkansas and northwest Mississippi. These thunderstorms will be capable of producing large hail, dangerous straight line winds and isolated tornadoes. Heavy rain will bring threats of flash flooding to southern Arkansas, northern Mississippi, northern Alabama and northwest Georgia.
Meanwhile, a series of disturbances will shift across the Southwest and the Intermountain West. Light to moderate rain and high elevation snow will affect portions of California, the Great Basin, the Desert Southwest and the Intermountain West. A dry weather pattern will continue across the majority of the Pacific Northwest on Monday.
A cold frontal boundary will move across the eastern half of the country on Monday, while a series of Pacific disturbances drifts over the western states.
A low pressure system will move in an eastward trajectory across the upper Great Lakes and southeast Canada. This system will usher a mixture of rain and snow over the upper Midwest and portions of the Northeast. A cold frontal boundary associated with this system will extend southwestward over the upper Midwest, the middle Mississippi Valley and the southern Plains. This frontal system will collide with warm and humid air from the Gulf of Mexico. The interaction will lead to numerous areas of showers and thunderstorms stretching from the southern Plains to the Mid-Atlantic. Severe thunderstorms will be possible in southeast Oklahoma, northeast Texas, northern Louisiana, Arkansas and northwest Mississippi. These thunderstorms will be capable of producing large hail, dangerous straight line winds and isolated tornadoes. Heavy rain will bring threats of flash flooding to southern Arkansas, northern Mississippi, northern Alabama and northwest Georgia.
Meanwhile, a series of disturbances will shift across the Southwest and the Intermountain West. Light to moderate rain and high elevation snow will affect portions of California, the Great Basin, the Desert Southwest and the Intermountain West. A dry weather pattern will continue across the majority of the Pacific Northwest on Monday.
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