Monday, February 20, 2017

Severe thunderstorms may threaten midwestern, northeastern US to end the week


By Alex Sosnowski, AccuWeather senior meteorologist
February 20,2017, 10:25:07AM,EST
 
 
The risk for severe thunderstorms will ramp up across the Ohio Valley states and lower Great Lakes region to end the week.
The severe weather potential will occur at the tail of record-challenging warmth. The same storm also has the potential to bring blizzard conditions to part of the central United States late this week.
The thunderstorms will mark the leading edge of colder air that will sweep southeastward from Canada and slash temperatures by 20 to 30 degrees Fahrenheit during the last weekend of February.
"The strongest storms will produce powerful wind gusts, heavy rain and hail," according to AccuWeather Storm Warning Meteorologist Brian Knopick.
Static Severe Friday Saturday
The storms have the potential to cause travel disruptions, including airline delays, in the Midwest from Detroit to Cleveland, Indianapolis, Indiana, Cincinnati, Ohio, Nashville, Tennessee, and Pittsburgh.
Flash and urban flooding are the greatest threats, but winds can be high enough to topple trees and cause sporadic power outages in the strongest storms.
"It is possible that a couple of the strongest storms produce an isolated, brief tornado as well," Knopick said.
The first storms are likely to erupt from parts of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan to part of the Tennessee Valley during Friday afternoon.
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The storms will then progress eastward across part of the lower Great Lakes region and the Ohio and Tennessee valleys during Friday night.
Thunderstorms may survive or re-fire in parts of the mid-Atlantic and New England on Saturday. At the very least, part of this region will be hit with downpours and some thunder and lightning at a time when outdoor activities typically ramp up.
Even where storms weaken moving into parts of the upper Great Lakes, New England and neighboring Canada, rain could be heavy enough, when combined with melting snow to raise the risk of flooding.
The sweep of cold air will end the severe weather threat for the time being over the Midwest and Northeast. However, the press of cold air could pave the way for wintry precipitation in parts of the Ohio Valley and Northeast early next week.
 

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