Weather Underground midday recap for Monday,March 31,2014
A cold frontal boundary inched across the West Coast on Monday, while a
separate cold front extended from the central Rockies to the upper
Midwest.
Heavy precipitation began to move across northern and central California
on Monday as a cold front pushed across the West Coast. Winter storm
warnings and winter weather advisories were issued across the Klamath
Mountains and the Sierra Nevadas as heavy snow began to move across the
higher elevations. This system also ushered moderate rain across western
Oregon. Washington stayed mostly clear of precipitation.
A separate cold front stretched from Colorado to Minnesota on Monday. A
strong low pressure system along the frontal boundary pushed heavy snow
across the northern Plains, as blizzard warnings were issued across the
Dakotas and western Minnesota. Walsh, N.D., reported a midday total of
7.0 inches of snow, while Grand Forks, N.D., reported a midday total of
3.5 inches of snow. Strong winds accompanied this system, as Pennington,
S.D., recorded wind speeds of 64 mph. A mixture of rain and snow also
moved across the upper Midwest. To the south, a line of showers and
thunderstorms developed over the southern Plains and the Mississippi
Valley.
Meanwhile, an area of low pressure moved north northeastward along the
northeastern coast on Monday. This system brought a mixture of rain and
snow to eastern New England, as Manchester, N.H., reported a midday
total of 1.38 inches of rain. The remainder of the Eastern Seaboard
stayed clear of wet weather. .
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