Weather Underground Forecast for Thursday,May 5,2016
A broad area of low pressure will swing across the East Coast on Thursday, while a slow moving frontal system shifts over the West Coast.
A pair of low pressure systems will merge over the Mid-Atlantic. This broad area of low pressure will produce rain and thunderstorms across the Midwest, the Mid-Atlantic and parts of the Southeast. Heavy rain will bring threats of flash flooding to southern Pennsylvania, western Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia and eastern North Carolina. Morning and early afternoon rain will affect a large portion of New England. Scattered showers will also trail this system over the upper Mississippi Valley. The majority of the Plains will stay clear of wet weather on Thursday. Temperatures will soar 15 to 25 degrees above normal across the northern Plains.
Meanwhile, a slow moving frontal system will stretch south southwestward across the upper Intermountain West, the Great Basin and southern California. This system will generate widespread showers and thunderstorms across the Rockies, the Wasatch, the Great Basin, the Southwest and the Pacific Northwest. High elevation snow showers will be possible from the Sierra Nevada to the Rockies. Gusty winds will also develop in southern California, southern Nevada and Arizona.
A broad area of low pressure will swing across the East Coast on Thursday, while a slow moving frontal system shifts over the West Coast.
A pair of low pressure systems will merge over the Mid-Atlantic. This broad area of low pressure will produce rain and thunderstorms across the Midwest, the Mid-Atlantic and parts of the Southeast. Heavy rain will bring threats of flash flooding to southern Pennsylvania, western Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia and eastern North Carolina. Morning and early afternoon rain will affect a large portion of New England. Scattered showers will also trail this system over the upper Mississippi Valley. The majority of the Plains will stay clear of wet weather on Thursday. Temperatures will soar 15 to 25 degrees above normal across the northern Plains.
Meanwhile, a slow moving frontal system will stretch south southwestward across the upper Intermountain West, the Great Basin and southern California. This system will generate widespread showers and thunderstorms across the Rockies, the Wasatch, the Great Basin, the Southwest and the Pacific Northwest. High elevation snow showers will be possible from the Sierra Nevada to the Rockies. Gusty winds will also develop in southern California, southern Nevada and Arizona.
No comments:
Post a Comment