Sunday, November 30, 2014

Minnesota to Texas: Polar Blast to Chill Millions

By Andy Mussoline, Meteorologist
November 30,2014; 8:10AM,EST
 
 
A fresh blast of frigid air and bone-chilling winds will continue to expand across the Plains and Midwest through Monday, targeting cities from Minneapolis to Chicago and Oklahoma City.
The frigid blast has already dropped temperatures nearly 60 degrees in a 24-hour period across parts of Montana Friday into Saturday. Some locales went from the mid-50s on Friday to nearly 10 below zero F.
The arctic chill will dive south and east through Monday, hitting areas from Minnesota, Wisconsin and Illinois to Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma with sharply colder air and drastically plummeting temperatures.

Highs near 40 F in Minneapolis from Saturday afternoon are being replaced by temperatures no better than the teens and single digits Sunday and Monday.
In Omaha, Nebraska, temperatures plunged 50 degrees after reaching 66 F on Saturday. Temperatures were hovering in the teens Sunday midday.
During Sunday morning, the temperature fell more than 20 degrees in one hour from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. MST, from 42 to 21 F.
Bone-chilling winds will accompany the cold blast on Sunday, forcing afternoon AccuWeather.com RealFeel® Temperatures into the single digits below zero. The RealFeel Temperature in Chicago will sit in the single digits above zero throughout the day on Monday.
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"This latest cold blast will not be nearly as wide-reaching or long lasting as the one that hit the country in the middle of November," said AccuWeather.com Meteorologist Mark Paquette. "The Plains and Midwest will be hit the hardest, while the Southeast will avoid much of the chill."
Oklahoma City will be near record highs in the 70s Sunday before highs plummet into the 30s for Monday. Winds will place RealFeel temperatures in the single digits around daybreak Monday.

The chill in the southern Plains and Texas will be brief and generally limited to a day or so.
Residents or visitors set to endure cold wave should prepare to dress warmly and limit any time outdoors. Those traveling home from Thanksgiving travels should put plenty of blankets in the car.
This is especially so across the northern Plains, where RealFeel temperatures will drop dangerously to 20 below zero F Sunday.
An arctic cold front slicing southward will be responsible for the cold wave.
The cold wave will not be accompanied by snow or ice for the most part. However, it may set the stage for an ice threat by midweek.

Know when the storms will hit by using AccuWeather's MinuteCast®. It has the minute-by-minute forecast for your exact location. Type your city name, select MinuteCast®, and input your street address. On mobile, you can also use your GPS location.
AccuWeather.com Senior Meteorologist Alex Sosnowski explains that a fast west-to-east flow across the nation next week will keep the coldest air out of the South but will lead to unsettled conditions in parts of the West, Midwest and Northeast.

On Social Media
kenneth sciullo
ksciullo01
U.S. Polar blast to chill millions from Minnesota to Texas -- Earth Changes -- Sott.net sott.net/article/289629…
Jameson Green
Allied_Command
--*eyes flying wide as a blast of cold air hit her in the face, she threw -- @MyNamesNewt @BugHunter_USCM @Xeno_Paranoia @SmartSynthetic
Ali Turiano
AliTurianoFox4
Quite a warm day in N. Texas. We have one more before a cold front brings a blast of cold air Monday. #txwx pic.twitter.com/q5yv9s6OWj
AccuWeather.com
breakingweather
A blast of frigid air & bone-chilling winds will expand across the Plains & Midwest through Mon. ow.ly/F54Tl
 

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