Weather Underground Forecast for Saturday,June 4,2016
A stormy weather pattern will affect the eastern half of the country on Saturday, while above normal temperatures impact the Southwest.
A low pressure system will push east southeastward across the upper Mississippi Valley. This system will usher moderate rain and embedded thunderstorms over parts of the northern Plains and the upper Midwest. A cold frontal boundary associated with this system will stretch south southwestward from the upper Mississippi Valley to the southern Plains. As this frontal boundary shifts eastward, it will generate moderate to heavy rain and strong thunderstorms across the eastern tier of the Plains, the Deep South, the Midwest, the Mid-Atlantic and the Southeast. Prolonged heavy rain will bring threats of flash flooding to Kentucky, southwest West Virginia, western Virginia, western North Carolina, western South Carolina, Tennessee, northern Georgia, northern Alabama, northeast Mississippi, southern Louisiana and southeast Texas. The tail end of this cold front will also produce scattered showers and thunderstorms across the southern Rockies.
Meanwhile, a separate frontal system will bring light to moderate rain to parts of New England. Showers will wind down by the late afternoon and evening.
Most areas west of the Continental Divide will stay clear of wet weather, with the exception to isolated thunderstorms in the Sierra Nevada. Excessive heat warnings will stay in place for southern California, southern Nevada and portions of Arizona. Afternoon temperatures will soar above 110 degrees across the Desert Southwest on Saturday.
A stormy weather pattern will affect the eastern half of the country on Saturday, while above normal temperatures impact the Southwest.
A low pressure system will push east southeastward across the upper Mississippi Valley. This system will usher moderate rain and embedded thunderstorms over parts of the northern Plains and the upper Midwest. A cold frontal boundary associated with this system will stretch south southwestward from the upper Mississippi Valley to the southern Plains. As this frontal boundary shifts eastward, it will generate moderate to heavy rain and strong thunderstorms across the eastern tier of the Plains, the Deep South, the Midwest, the Mid-Atlantic and the Southeast. Prolonged heavy rain will bring threats of flash flooding to Kentucky, southwest West Virginia, western Virginia, western North Carolina, western South Carolina, Tennessee, northern Georgia, northern Alabama, northeast Mississippi, southern Louisiana and southeast Texas. The tail end of this cold front will also produce scattered showers and thunderstorms across the southern Rockies.
Meanwhile, a separate frontal system will bring light to moderate rain to parts of New England. Showers will wind down by the late afternoon and evening.
Most areas west of the Continental Divide will stay clear of wet weather, with the exception to isolated thunderstorms in the Sierra Nevada. Excessive heat warnings will stay in place for southern California, southern Nevada and portions of Arizona. Afternoon temperatures will soar above 110 degrees across the Desert Southwest on Saturday.
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