Severe
Weather: Threat Ramps Up as Temperatures Warm Up
31
January, 2014
A
few spotty strong thunderstorms are possible Tuesday night for parts
of the South. The main threat will be some hail, though mostly below
severe thresholds. Cities in the risk area include Memphis;
Nashville; Chattanooga, Tenn.; Tupelo, Miss.; and Huntsville, Ala.
With
a major pattern shift in the works bringing warmer weather to the
central and eastern U.S., strong to severe thunderstorms will become
more of a concern by Thursday and Friday – even in areas that still
have snow on the ground now.
A
very strong low-pressure system will bring a large area of very
strong winds just above the ground beginning Wednesday night over the
central U.S., spreading east on Thursday. The system will also pull
warm, moist, unstable air north from the Gulf of Mexico. These
elements will set the stage for an episode of severe weather.
The
potential for strong thunderstorms begins late
Wednesday night
over parts of Kansas and Missouri. The bigger threat develops
Thursday
and continues into Thursday night in the Ohio Valley, mid to lower
Mississippi Valley, and the western Gulf Coast states. The main
threat, by far, will be damaging winds. However, a few tornadoes will
be possible, along with some large hail.
On
Friday,
strong to potentially severe thunderstorms may sweep into the East
Coast states from Florida to the Mid-Atlantic states. Again, damaging
wind gusts will be the primary threat. Thunderstorms should move off
the Atlantic coast by sunset Friday.
For
the day-by-day severe weather forecast from our severe weather
expert, Dr. Greg Forbes, click
here.
Cold and snowy in Michigan.
Temperature
Temperature anomaly
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