Weather Underground Forecast for Monday,May 2,2016
A slow moving frontal system will impact the eastern half of the country on Monday, while a trough of low pressure deteriorates over the Southwest.
An area of low pressure will drift east northeastward over the Ohio Valley and New England. This system will generate light to moderate rain over the Northeast. A mixture of rain and snow will be possible across northwest New England. A cold frontal boundary associated with this system will stretch southwestward from the central Appalachians to the western Gulf Coast. This system is forecast to produce widespread rain and thunderstorms across the Midwest, the Mid-Atlantic, the Southeast, the Deep South and the Gulf Coast. Due to the slow nature of this system, flash flooding will be possible in eastern Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, northern Alabama, northern Georgia, eastern Tennessee, eastern Kentucky, western North Carolina, western Virginia and southern West Virginia.
Meanwhile, a trough of low pressure will weaken as it drifts across the Southwest and the Intermountain West. Scattered showers and high elevation snow will remain a possibility from the Sierra Nevada to the Rockies. Moderate to heavy snow will affect favorable slopes across southwest Colorado. Additionally, showers and isolated thunderstorms will form over the Northwest as a Pacific cold front approaches the West Coast.
A slow moving frontal system will impact the eastern half of the country on Monday, while a trough of low pressure deteriorates over the Southwest.
An area of low pressure will drift east northeastward over the Ohio Valley and New England. This system will generate light to moderate rain over the Northeast. A mixture of rain and snow will be possible across northwest New England. A cold frontal boundary associated with this system will stretch southwestward from the central Appalachians to the western Gulf Coast. This system is forecast to produce widespread rain and thunderstorms across the Midwest, the Mid-Atlantic, the Southeast, the Deep South and the Gulf Coast. Due to the slow nature of this system, flash flooding will be possible in eastern Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, northern Alabama, northern Georgia, eastern Tennessee, eastern Kentucky, western North Carolina, western Virginia and southern West Virginia.
Meanwhile, a trough of low pressure will weaken as it drifts across the Southwest and the Intermountain West. Scattered showers and high elevation snow will remain a possibility from the Sierra Nevada to the Rockies. Moderate to heavy snow will affect favorable slopes across southwest Colorado. Additionally, showers and isolated thunderstorms will form over the Northwest as a Pacific cold front approaches the West Coast.
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