Weather Underground Forecast for Tuesday,July 26,2016
A frontal boundary will stretch from the southern Plains to the East Coast on Tuesday, while a separate frontal system moves over the northern Plains.
A cold frontal boundary will extend west southwestward from the Mid-Atlantic to the southern Plains. This frontal boundary will transition into a warm front over the southern and central Plains, which will set the stage for widespread rain and thunderstorms. Stormy weather will affect areas such as the southern Plains, the middle Mississippi Valley, the Tennessee Valley and the Mid-Atlantic. Just to the south, a deep plume of moisture will move onshore from the Gulf of Mexico. Moderate to heavy rain and embedded thunderstorms will batter the Gulf Coast. The heaviest rain is forecast to impact the central and western Gulf Coast.
Meanwhile, another cold front will stretch west southwestward from south central Canada to upper Intermountain West. This frontal boundary will collide with warm and muggy air, generating showers and thunderstorms over the upper Intermountain West, the northern Plains and the upper Mississippi Valley. Severe thunderstorms will be possible in South Dakota and central Nebraska. These thunderstorms will be capable of producing large hail, dangerous straight line winds and isolated tornadoes. Monsoonal thunderstorms will also persist across the Four Corners on Tuesday.
A frontal boundary will stretch from the southern Plains to the East Coast on Tuesday, while a separate frontal system moves over the northern Plains.
A cold frontal boundary will extend west southwestward from the Mid-Atlantic to the southern Plains. This frontal boundary will transition into a warm front over the southern and central Plains, which will set the stage for widespread rain and thunderstorms. Stormy weather will affect areas such as the southern Plains, the middle Mississippi Valley, the Tennessee Valley and the Mid-Atlantic. Just to the south, a deep plume of moisture will move onshore from the Gulf of Mexico. Moderate to heavy rain and embedded thunderstorms will batter the Gulf Coast. The heaviest rain is forecast to impact the central and western Gulf Coast.
Meanwhile, another cold front will stretch west southwestward from south central Canada to upper Intermountain West. This frontal boundary will collide with warm and muggy air, generating showers and thunderstorms over the upper Intermountain West, the northern Plains and the upper Mississippi Valley. Severe thunderstorms will be possible in South Dakota and central Nebraska. These thunderstorms will be capable of producing large hail, dangerous straight line winds and isolated tornadoes. Monsoonal thunderstorms will also persist across the Four Corners on Tuesday.
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