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LIVE Updates - BREAKING DOOM! Cataclysmic 3 Days of Weather Forecast for the U.S.A.
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[quote:AstroBuzz:MV80MDIxNTg5XzcyODIwMDQ3XzdEMjU0OTM2] Four things to know about the severe weather threat this week: 1. Hail May Be the Biggest Concern in Some Areas There will be the threat of tornadoes and damaging wind gusts with this mid- to late-week severe thunderstorm threat, but in some areas, hail will likely be the main threat. This is especially true Wednesday evening into early Thursday in parts of the southern Plains. NOAA's Storm Prediction Center noted that large and destructive hail is possible, with 2-inch diameter or larger hailstones, especially as thunderstorms begin to form. This risk for significant hail includes the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. For reference, golf-ball-sized hail is about 1.75 inches in diameter, and baseball-sized hail is 2.75 inches in diameter. Although tornadoes get the most attention, large hail is a major threat and can cause substantial damage to homes and vehicles and can injure people. 2. Severe Thunderstorm Threat Continues Overnight Severe thunderstorms are expected to ramp up Wednesday evening, and the risk of severe weather will persist overnight and into early Thursday morning. The chance for damaging winds, hail and tornadoes will track eastward Thursday into parts of the South and Ohio Valley. Strong to severe thunderstorms may also continue Thursday night into early Friday as they track toward the East Coast. Tornadoes at night are more than twice as likely to be deadly as those during the day. Nighttime tornadoes are harder to see, so they are more difficult to confirm. People may be asleep and not receive warnings. And more people are home, which is often more vulnerable than their workplace. It's important to make sure you have a way of receiving severe weather warnings even when you are sleeping and to know where your safe place is overnight. 3. Flash Flooding Will Also Be a Threat A widespread area of 1 to 3 inches of rainfall will stretch from eastern Texas into the Southeast, Ohio Valley, mid-Atlantic and Northeast. Locally heavier rainfall is likely in some locations. Portions of eastern Texas, northern Louisiana and southern Arkansas experienced flash flooding last weekend, and additional moderate to heavy rainfall over a short period of time could cause flash flooding there once again. A flash flood watch has been issued by the National Weather Service from northeastern Texas into northern Louisiana, southern and eastern Arkansas, Mississippi and southwestern Tennessee. NOAA has also issued slight risk for excessive rainfall from parts of the northern Gulf Coast into the Ohio Valley for Thursday and for portions of the mid-Atlantic and Northeast on Friday. Some flash flooding could occur, and it may also lead to rises on rivers. The soil moisture in these areas remains well above average for this time of year. Saturated ground, combined with more rainfall, will increase the risk of flooding. 4. Temperature Drop Behind This System There is often a battle between warm and cold temperatures in the spring, and that will be the case this week. Ahead of this low-pressure system, warmer temperatures will surge northward. High and low temperatures will be 10 to 20 degrees above average for mid-April, with highs in the 70s reaching into parts of the Midwest and Northeast and 80s in the South. https://weather.com/storms/severe/news/2019-04-17-what-to-know-about-severe-thunderstorm-threat-overnight-hail-flood [/quote]
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Jet stream being pushed down... flights canceled! Doom!!!
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