SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook

4 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0439 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025 Valid 221200Z - 281200Z Across the CONUS, mid-level flow will become zonal and weaken slightly over the next several days before a more amplified pattern emerges mid to late week next week. Lee troughing and downslope winds will increase from the Rockies to the Southwest. Dry conditions and ridging aloft are also expected over the eastern US. This will tend to support an increase in fire-weather concerns over the extended forecast period. ...Southwest to the High Plains... As flow aloft begins to increase with the more amplified flow pattern, gusty winds and dry conditions are expected over much of the western US. Lee troughing and gusty downslope winds are likely over the Rockies and High Plains through early next week. Dry and breezy conditions are expected over the Southwest and southern High Plains, possibly extending into WY/CO. Given relatively dry fuels, this will support elevated fire-weather concerns. Dry and breezy conditions are also possible over the Great Basin, though fuels here remain less receptive. A strong cold front will then move south midweek, bringing cooler temperatures and limiting broader fire-weather potential over the Plains. There remains some uncertainty on the extent of fire-weather conditions late next week into next weekend, as the cold front is likely to usher in a cooler air mass over the southern High Plains and parts of the Southwest. More sheltered areas in the southern Great Basin and western NM may still have several days of dry and breezy conditions as the main western US trough and flow aloft shift eastward. However, confidence in the evolution of the upper-air pattern remains limited, and no additional probabilities have been added pending uncertainties on drying fuels. ...Southeast... Subtropical ridging is excepted to gradually build through the extended forecast period, keeping much of the Southeastern US warm and relatively dry. Winds beneath the ridge should also remain fairly light. Ongoing drought is likely to persist, potentially supporting some fire-weather concerns through much of next week. This is especially so over parts of FL where fuels are very dry and easterly winds may reach 10-15 mph occasionally. ..Lyons.. 04/20/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook

4 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0439 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025 Valid 221200Z - 281200Z Across the CONUS, mid-level flow will become zonal and weaken slightly over the next several days before a more amplified pattern emerges mid to late week next week. Lee troughing and downslope winds will increase from the Rockies to the Southwest. Dry conditions and ridging aloft are also expected over the eastern US. This will tend to support an increase in fire-weather concerns over the extended forecast period. ...Southwest to the High Plains... As flow aloft begins to increase with the more amplified flow pattern, gusty winds and dry conditions are expected over much of the western US. Lee troughing and gusty downslope winds are likely over the Rockies and High Plains through early next week. Dry and breezy conditions are expected over the Southwest and southern High Plains, possibly extending into WY/CO. Given relatively dry fuels, this will support elevated fire-weather concerns. Dry and breezy conditions are also possible over the Great Basin, though fuels here remain less receptive. A strong cold front will then move south midweek, bringing cooler temperatures and limiting broader fire-weather potential over the Plains. There remains some uncertainty on the extent of fire-weather conditions late next week into next weekend, as the cold front is likely to usher in a cooler air mass over the southern High Plains and parts of the Southwest. More sheltered areas in the southern Great Basin and western NM may still have several days of dry and breezy conditions as the main western US trough and flow aloft shift eastward. However, confidence in the evolution of the upper-air pattern remains limited, and no additional probabilities have been added pending uncertainties on drying fuels. ...Southeast... Subtropical ridging is excepted to gradually build through the extended forecast period, keeping much of the Southeastern US warm and relatively dry. Winds beneath the ridge should also remain fairly light. Ongoing drought is likely to persist, potentially supporting some fire-weather concerns through much of next week. This is especially so over parts of FL where fuels are very dry and easterly winds may reach 10-15 mph occasionally. ..Lyons.. 04/20/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook

4 months 3 weeks ago
SPC Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook
Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0439 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025 Valid 221200Z - 281200Z Across the CONUS, mid-level flow will become zonal and weaken slightly over the next several days before a more amplified pattern emerges mid to late week next week. Lee troughing and downslope winds will increase from the Rockies to the Southwest. Dry conditions and ridging aloft are also expected over the eastern US. This will tend to support an increase in fire-weather concerns over the extended forecast period. ...Southwest to the High Plains... As flow aloft begins to increase with the more amplified flow pattern, gusty winds and dry conditions are expected over much of the western US. Lee troughing and gusty downslope winds are likely over the Rockies and High Plains through early next week. Dry and breezy conditions are expected over the Southwest and southern High Plains, possibly extending into WY/CO. Given relatively dry fuels, this will support elevated fire-weather concerns. Dry and breezy conditions are also possible over the Great Basin, though fuels here remain less receptive. A strong cold front will then move south midweek, bringing cooler temperatures and limiting broader fire-weather potential over the Plains. There remains some uncertainty on the extent of fire-weather conditions late next week into next weekend, as the cold front is likely to usher in a cooler air mass over the southern High Plains and parts of the Southwest. More sheltered areas in the southern Great Basin and western NM may still have several days of dry and breezy conditions as the main western US trough and flow aloft shift eastward. However, confidence in the evolution of the upper-air pattern remains limited, and no additional probabilities have been added pending uncertainties on drying fuels. ...Southeast... Subtropical ridging is excepted to gradually build through the extended forecast period, keeping much of the Southeastern US warm and relatively dry. Winds beneath the ridge should also remain fairly light. Ongoing drought is likely to persist, potentially supporting some fire-weather concerns through much of next week. This is especially so over parts of FL where fuels are very dry and easterly winds may reach 10-15 mph occasionally. ..Lyons.. 04/20/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product... Read more

SPC MD 504

4 months 3 weeks ago
MD 0504 CONCERNING TORNADO WATCH 154... FOR NORTHWEST/NORTH-CENTRAL ARKANSAS INTO SOUTHERN MISSOURI
Mesoscale Discussion 0504 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0246 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025 Areas affected...Northwest/north-central Arkansas into southern Missouri Concerning...Tornado Watch 154... Valid 201946Z - 202115Z The severe weather threat for Tornado Watch 154 continues. SUMMARY...Storms moving into north-central Arkansas and southern Missouri will pose a risk of tornadoes--some strong--and damaging winds. There are signs of discrete storms within the line in northwest/west-central Arkansas. These storms would bring the greatest tornado risk. DISCUSSION...KSRX radar imagery shows a few semi-discrete storms in far western Arkansas. MRMS CAPPI data also shows these storms intensifying. Mid-level ascent with southern extent will remain more limited, but deep-layer shear vectors slightly more perpendicular to the cold front will also favor discrete storms. VAD data from KSGF/KLZK/KLSX all have shown an increase in low-level SRH over the past couple of hours. This trend should continue, particularly in Missouri. Supercell and QLCS tornadoes, some of which could be strong, are all possible in this environment. Additionally, the more linear convective elements will also pose a threat of wind damage. ..Wendt.. 04/20/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...LZK...SGF...TSA... LAT...LON 36229452 36709452 37129414 37419288 37379162 36929141 35529178 34889289 34619371 34509449 36229452 MOST PROBABLE PEAK TORNADO INTENSITY...120-150 MPH MOST PROBABLE PEAK WIND GUST...65-80 MPH MOST PROBABLE PEAK HAIL SIZE...1.00-1.75 IN Read more

SPC MD 502

4 months 3 weeks ago
MD 0502 CONCERNING SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH LIKELY FOR EASTERN MISSOURI INTO WESTERN ILLINOIS AND FAR SOUTHEASTERN IOWA
Mesoscale Discussion 0502 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0220 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025 Areas affected...Eastern Missouri into western Illinois and far southeastern Iowa Concerning...Severe potential...Watch likely Valid 201920Z - 202115Z Probability of Watch Issuance...80 percent SUMMARY...A tornado watch will be forthcoming for portions of eastern Missouri into western Illinois and far southeastern Iowa, as a warm frontal boundary continues to lift northward out of central Missouri. DISCUSSION...Breaks in cloud cover, along with a northward-lifting surface warm frontal boundary, have resulted in continued destabilization across eastern Missouri into western Illinois. With mixed-layer CAPE forecast to exceed 1000 J/kg in the presence of strong wind shear (and strong curvature of the low-level hodograph in the vicinity of the front), the tornado threat is expected to increase this afternoon into the evening hours. Ongoing storms along the MO/KS/OK borders are forecast to continue north and east into the new watch area, with supercells embedded within a largely linear complex. Any embedded supercells (especially any within the vicinity of the warm front), as well as any pre-frontal storms, will have access to an environment characterized by strong low-level shear/streamwise vorticity supportive of tornado development. Current VAD wind profiles from KLSX show 200 m^2/s^2 of 0-500m storm relative helicity -- nearly double what is shown in the current SPC Mesoanalysis. Given the environmental support for tornadoes, some of which may be strong, a tornado watch is anticipated within the next hour or two. ..Halbert/Goss.. 04/20/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...PAH...ILX...LSX...DVN...SGF...DMX...EAX... LAT...LON 41249043 41119012 40788991 40498976 39178955 38668947 38138943 37538936 37258941 36988946 36868967 36749007 36709052 36679128 36699176 36819216 36939224 37269227 38759232 39489239 40199248 40619251 41139238 41309216 41289125 41249043 MOST PROBABLE PEAK TORNADO INTENSITY...120-150 MPH MOST PROBABLE PEAK WIND GUST...65-80 MPH MOST PROBABLE PEAK HAIL SIZE...1.00-1.75 IN Read more

SPC MD 503

4 months 3 weeks ago
MD 0503 CONCERNING TORNADO WATCH 154... FOR SOUTHWEST INTO CENTRAL MISSOURI
Mesoscale Discussion 0503 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0223 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025 Areas affected...Southwest into central Missouri Concerning...Tornado Watch 154... Valid 201923Z - 202100Z The severe weather threat for Tornado Watch 154 continues. SUMMARY...Storms moving along and near the lifting warm front will have an increased potential to produce a tornado given the development of a more favorable environment over the next few hours. DISCUSSION...Strong surface pressure falls have been noted in central Missouri over the past couple of hours. The surface low is deepening and should continue to track northeastward this afternoon. Low-level winds have also begun to respond to the deepening cyclone per regional VAD winds. Further increase in 850 mb winds are expected over the next few hours as well. As temperatures continue to rise south of the lifting warm front, storms tracking near and along the boundary will have an increased potential to produce a tornado--a strong tornado would be possible. ..Wendt.. 04/20/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product... ATTN...WFO...LSX...SGF...EAX...TSA... LAT...LON 37409490 37569488 37759470 38219413 38799372 39229316 39449280 39539226 39539186 39349144 39059142 38509168 37939282 36989415 36979482 37409490 MOST PROBABLE PEAK TORNADO INTENSITY...120-150 MPH MOST PROBABLE PEAK WIND GUST...65-80 MPH MOST PROBABLE PEAK HAIL SIZE...1.00-1.75 IN Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 155

4 months 3 weeks ago
WW 155 TORNADO IA IL KY MO 202040Z - 210400Z
URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED Tornado Watch Number 155 NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 340 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025 The NWS Storm Prediction Center has issued a * Tornado Watch for portions of southeastern Iowa western and centrl Illinois far western Kentucky eastern Missouri * Effective this Sunday afternoon and evening from 340 PM until 1100 PM CDT. * Primary threats include... A few tornadoes and a couple intense tornadoes possible Scattered damaging wind gusts to 70 mph likely Scattered large hail events to 1.5 inches in diameter possible SUMMARY...Ongoing strong/severe thunderstorms are forecast to continue moving eastward/northeastward across Missouri this afternoon and evening, spreading into parts of southeastern Iowa and Illinois over the next several hours. Along with some hail risk, damaging wind gusts are expected, along with potential for tornadoes -- a couple of which could be strong. The tornado watch area is approximately along and 60 statute miles east and west of a line from 30 miles north northeast of Burlington IA to 15 miles east southeast of Poplar Bluff MO. For a complete depiction of the watch see the associated watch outline update (WOUS64 KWNS WOU5). PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... REMEMBER...A Tornado Watch means conditions are favorable for tornadoes and severe thunderstorms in and close to the watch area. Persons in these areas should be on the lookout for threatening weather conditions and listen for later statements and possible warnings. && OTHER WATCH INFORMATION...CONTINUE...WW 154... AVIATION...Tornadoes and a few severe thunderstorms with hail surface and aloft to 1.5 inches. Extreme turbulence and surface wind gusts to 60 knots. A few cumulonimbi with maximum tops to 500. Mean storm motion vector 23040. ...Goss Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 154 Status Reports

4 months 3 weeks ago
WW 0154 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 154 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 35 S PRX TO 25 WSW DEQ TO 20 NNE DEQ TO 30 ESE RKR TO 5 N FYV TO 15 WNW UMN TO 30 SE OJC. ..WENDT..04/20/25 ATTN...WFO...LZK...TSA...SHV...SGF...EAX...LSX... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 154 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ARC005-009-015-019-023-027-029-039-045-047-049-051-053-057-059- 061-065-071-073-081-083-087-089-091-097-099-101-103-105-109-113- 115-119-125-127-129-133-137-141-149-202140- AR . ARKANSAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BAXTER BOONE CARROLL CLARK CLEBURNE COLUMBIA CONWAY DALLAS FAULKNER FRANKLIN FULTON GARLAND GRANT HEMPSTEAD HOT SPRING HOWARD IZARD JOHNSON LAFAYETTE LITTLE RIVER LOGAN MADISON MARION MILLER MONTGOMERY NEVADA NEWTON OUACHITA PERRY PIKE POLK POPE PULASKI SALINE SCOTT SEARCY SEVIER STONE VAN BUREN YELL LAC015-017-119-202140- Read more

SPC Tornado Watch 154 Status Reports

4 months 3 weeks ago
WW 0154 Status Updates
STATUS REPORT ON WW 154 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES RIGHT OF A LINE FROM 35 S PRX TO 25 WSW DEQ TO 20 NNE DEQ TO 30 ESE RKR TO 5 N FYV TO 15 WNW UMN TO 30 SE OJC. ..WENDT..04/20/25 ATTN...WFO...LZK...TSA...SHV...SGF...EAX...LSX... STATUS REPORT FOR WT 154 SEVERE WEATHER THREAT CONTINUES FOR THE FOLLOWING AREAS ARC005-009-015-019-023-027-029-039-045-047-049-051-053-057-059- 061-065-071-073-081-083-087-089-091-097-099-101-103-105-109-113- 115-119-125-127-129-133-137-141-149-202140- AR . ARKANSAS COUNTIES INCLUDED ARE BAXTER BOONE CARROLL CLARK CLEBURNE COLUMBIA CONWAY DALLAS FAULKNER FRANKLIN FULTON GARLAND GRANT HEMPSTEAD HOT SPRING HOWARD IZARD JOHNSON LAFAYETTE LITTLE RIVER LOGAN MADISON MARION MILLER MONTGOMERY NEVADA NEWTON OUACHITA PERRY PIKE POLK POPE PULASKI SALINE SCOTT SEARCY SEVIER STONE VAN BUREN YELL LAC015-017-119-202140- Read more

SPC Apr 20, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

4 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0253 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025 Valid 202000Z - 211200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHERN ARKANSAS AND MISSOURI VICINITY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are expected today across parts of the ArkLaTex into the Ozarks and mid Mississippi Valley, mainly this afternoon and evening. The best corridor for tornadoes (some of which could be strong) and scattered to numerous damaging winds should exist from central/northern Arkansas into Missouri. ...20z Update.. A broken line of thunderstorm activity continues near the surface low in northeastern OK/southeastern KS and along an attendant surface cold front extending from eastern OK southward into northeastern Texas/southern Arkansas. This activity is expected to continue to shift north and eastward through time as the low tracks to the east through the afternoon and evening. Storm intensity has been increasing over the last couple of hours, owing to daytime heating ahead of the front, where MLCAPE around 500-1500 J/kg is observed in surface objective analysis. VAD profiles across eastern Arkansas northward into Missouri show strong low-level shear in place, with large curved hodographs and rich low-level SRH. This trend will continue with the strengthening low-level jet lifting through the Mississippi Valley into the Midwest this evening, supporting risk for embedded supercells and tornadoes, a few of which may be strong. In addition to the tornado threat, bowing structures along the front will support risk for damaging winds. See MCD#502 and MCD#504 for more information. Thunderstorm coverage will increase along the southern portion of the front in central/eastern Texas into Louisiana through the afternoon and evening. This region is somewhat removed from the area of greater low and mid-level flow, which will keep severe potential more limited. See previous discussion for more information. ..Thornton/Goss.. 04/20/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1129 AM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025/ ...Synopsis... A compact upper low currently moving into western Oklahoma will shift quickly northeastward this afternoon and tonight, crossing eastern Kansas and western Missouri this evening and then continuing northeastward across Iowa and into Wisconsin tonight. Fast southwesterly flow aloft will exist in advance of this system, within the tight height gradient between this feature and the persistent ridge centered over the Southeast. At the surface, a developing low analyzed over western Oklahoma at 15Z is forecast to progress northeastward across southeastern Kansas and Missouri through the afternoon, and then should continue northward toward -- and eventually into -- southern Wisconsin by early Monday morning. While a warm front lifts northward across the Mid Mississippi Valley/Midwest, a cold front trailing from the low will sweep eastward into/across Missouri and Arkansas this afternoon and evening, and then across the Mid and Lower Mississippi Valleys through the end of the period. ...Northeastern Texas northeastward to the western Illinois vicinity... An expansive area of multi-level cloud cover, along with ongoing convection, is evident across western and northern portions of the risk area late this morning, which continues to retard more substantial heating at this point. With that said, some breaks in the clouds are evident per recent visible imagery as far west as eastern Oklahoma, with thinning cloud cover with eastward/northeastward extent into Arkansas and the Ozarks. As the surface low over Oklahoma deepens through the day in tandem with the advance of the upper low, northward advance of the warm front with time will allow a moist boundary layer to likewise overspread much of Missouri and Illinois through sunset. This, combined with at least modest heating across portions of the area should yield an amply unstable environment (500 to near 1500 J/kg mixed-layer CAPE) to gradually evolve -- supporting a steady increase in convective coverage and intensity this afternoon. In contrast to the rather modest thermodynamic environment, a very favorable low-level and deep-layer wind field is evident, with respect to development of organized/rotating storms. An 80 kt mid-level jet will spread northeastward across the risk area with time, atop a 50-plus kt low-level jet. This will support vigorous updraft evolution, with all-hazards severe risk evolving as a result. At this time, it remains apparent that tornado potential -- including risk for a couple of strong tornadoes -- should maximize across the Ozarks, and areas just north and south, as surface winds back to southeasterly ahead of the deepening/advancing surface low. The primary risk should evolve with an anticipated, broken band of storms within the cold-frontal zone, including embedded supercells. Along with the tornado potential, fairly widespread coverage of damaging wind gusts is also expected, as complex, LEWP/bow-type structures are expected within the band of storms, as convection advances eastward across Missouri and Arkansas toward the Mississippi Valley through the afternoon and into the evening hours. Severe risk is expected to expand as far north as southeastern Iowa and adjacent western Illinois this evening, where weaker instability is expected, and as far south as eastern Texas where a weaker wind field with southward extent should limit severe potential on the southern fringe. Risk should very gradually diminish overnight as convection shifts eastward across the Mid-Mississippi Valley. Read more

SPC Apr 20, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

4 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0253 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025 Valid 202000Z - 211200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHERN ARKANSAS AND MISSOURI VICINITY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are expected today across parts of the ArkLaTex into the Ozarks and mid Mississippi Valley, mainly this afternoon and evening. The best corridor for tornadoes (some of which could be strong) and scattered to numerous damaging winds should exist from central/northern Arkansas into Missouri. ...20z Update.. A broken line of thunderstorm activity continues near the surface low in northeastern OK/southeastern KS and along an attendant surface cold front extending from eastern OK southward into northeastern Texas/southern Arkansas. This activity is expected to continue to shift north and eastward through time as the low tracks to the east through the afternoon and evening. Storm intensity has been increasing over the last couple of hours, owing to daytime heating ahead of the front, where MLCAPE around 500-1500 J/kg is observed in surface objective analysis. VAD profiles across eastern Arkansas northward into Missouri show strong low-level shear in place, with large curved hodographs and rich low-level SRH. This trend will continue with the strengthening low-level jet lifting through the Mississippi Valley into the Midwest this evening, supporting risk for embedded supercells and tornadoes, a few of which may be strong. In addition to the tornado threat, bowing structures along the front will support risk for damaging winds. See MCD#502 and MCD#504 for more information. Thunderstorm coverage will increase along the southern portion of the front in central/eastern Texas into Louisiana through the afternoon and evening. This region is somewhat removed from the area of greater low and mid-level flow, which will keep severe potential more limited. See previous discussion for more information. ..Thornton/Goss.. 04/20/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1129 AM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025/ ...Synopsis... A compact upper low currently moving into western Oklahoma will shift quickly northeastward this afternoon and tonight, crossing eastern Kansas and western Missouri this evening and then continuing northeastward across Iowa and into Wisconsin tonight. Fast southwesterly flow aloft will exist in advance of this system, within the tight height gradient between this feature and the persistent ridge centered over the Southeast. At the surface, a developing low analyzed over western Oklahoma at 15Z is forecast to progress northeastward across southeastern Kansas and Missouri through the afternoon, and then should continue northward toward -- and eventually into -- southern Wisconsin by early Monday morning. While a warm front lifts northward across the Mid Mississippi Valley/Midwest, a cold front trailing from the low will sweep eastward into/across Missouri and Arkansas this afternoon and evening, and then across the Mid and Lower Mississippi Valleys through the end of the period. ...Northeastern Texas northeastward to the western Illinois vicinity... An expansive area of multi-level cloud cover, along with ongoing convection, is evident across western and northern portions of the risk area late this morning, which continues to retard more substantial heating at this point. With that said, some breaks in the clouds are evident per recent visible imagery as far west as eastern Oklahoma, with thinning cloud cover with eastward/northeastward extent into Arkansas and the Ozarks. As the surface low over Oklahoma deepens through the day in tandem with the advance of the upper low, northward advance of the warm front with time will allow a moist boundary layer to likewise overspread much of Missouri and Illinois through sunset. This, combined with at least modest heating across portions of the area should yield an amply unstable environment (500 to near 1500 J/kg mixed-layer CAPE) to gradually evolve -- supporting a steady increase in convective coverage and intensity this afternoon. In contrast to the rather modest thermodynamic environment, a very favorable low-level and deep-layer wind field is evident, with respect to development of organized/rotating storms. An 80 kt mid-level jet will spread northeastward across the risk area with time, atop a 50-plus kt low-level jet. This will support vigorous updraft evolution, with all-hazards severe risk evolving as a result. At this time, it remains apparent that tornado potential -- including risk for a couple of strong tornadoes -- should maximize across the Ozarks, and areas just north and south, as surface winds back to southeasterly ahead of the deepening/advancing surface low. The primary risk should evolve with an anticipated, broken band of storms within the cold-frontal zone, including embedded supercells. Along with the tornado potential, fairly widespread coverage of damaging wind gusts is also expected, as complex, LEWP/bow-type structures are expected within the band of storms, as convection advances eastward across Missouri and Arkansas toward the Mississippi Valley through the afternoon and into the evening hours. Severe risk is expected to expand as far north as southeastern Iowa and adjacent western Illinois this evening, where weaker instability is expected, and as far south as eastern Texas where a weaker wind field with southward extent should limit severe potential on the southern fringe. Risk should very gradually diminish overnight as convection shifts eastward across the Mid-Mississippi Valley. Read more

SPC Apr 20, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

4 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0253 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025 Valid 202000Z - 211200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHERN ARKANSAS AND MISSOURI VICINITY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are expected today across parts of the ArkLaTex into the Ozarks and mid Mississippi Valley, mainly this afternoon and evening. The best corridor for tornadoes (some of which could be strong) and scattered to numerous damaging winds should exist from central/northern Arkansas into Missouri. ...20z Update.. A broken line of thunderstorm activity continues near the surface low in northeastern OK/southeastern KS and along an attendant surface cold front extending from eastern OK southward into northeastern Texas/southern Arkansas. This activity is expected to continue to shift north and eastward through time as the low tracks to the east through the afternoon and evening. Storm intensity has been increasing over the last couple of hours, owing to daytime heating ahead of the front, where MLCAPE around 500-1500 J/kg is observed in surface objective analysis. VAD profiles across eastern Arkansas northward into Missouri show strong low-level shear in place, with large curved hodographs and rich low-level SRH. This trend will continue with the strengthening low-level jet lifting through the Mississippi Valley into the Midwest this evening, supporting risk for embedded supercells and tornadoes, a few of which may be strong. In addition to the tornado threat, bowing structures along the front will support risk for damaging winds. See MCD#502 and MCD#504 for more information. Thunderstorm coverage will increase along the southern portion of the front in central/eastern Texas into Louisiana through the afternoon and evening. This region is somewhat removed from the area of greater low and mid-level flow, which will keep severe potential more limited. See previous discussion for more information. ..Thornton/Goss.. 04/20/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1129 AM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025/ ...Synopsis... A compact upper low currently moving into western Oklahoma will shift quickly northeastward this afternoon and tonight, crossing eastern Kansas and western Missouri this evening and then continuing northeastward across Iowa and into Wisconsin tonight. Fast southwesterly flow aloft will exist in advance of this system, within the tight height gradient between this feature and the persistent ridge centered over the Southeast. At the surface, a developing low analyzed over western Oklahoma at 15Z is forecast to progress northeastward across southeastern Kansas and Missouri through the afternoon, and then should continue northward toward -- and eventually into -- southern Wisconsin by early Monday morning. While a warm front lifts northward across the Mid Mississippi Valley/Midwest, a cold front trailing from the low will sweep eastward into/across Missouri and Arkansas this afternoon and evening, and then across the Mid and Lower Mississippi Valleys through the end of the period. ...Northeastern Texas northeastward to the western Illinois vicinity... An expansive area of multi-level cloud cover, along with ongoing convection, is evident across western and northern portions of the risk area late this morning, which continues to retard more substantial heating at this point. With that said, some breaks in the clouds are evident per recent visible imagery as far west as eastern Oklahoma, with thinning cloud cover with eastward/northeastward extent into Arkansas and the Ozarks. As the surface low over Oklahoma deepens through the day in tandem with the advance of the upper low, northward advance of the warm front with time will allow a moist boundary layer to likewise overspread much of Missouri and Illinois through sunset. This, combined with at least modest heating across portions of the area should yield an amply unstable environment (500 to near 1500 J/kg mixed-layer CAPE) to gradually evolve -- supporting a steady increase in convective coverage and intensity this afternoon. In contrast to the rather modest thermodynamic environment, a very favorable low-level and deep-layer wind field is evident, with respect to development of organized/rotating storms. An 80 kt mid-level jet will spread northeastward across the risk area with time, atop a 50-plus kt low-level jet. This will support vigorous updraft evolution, with all-hazards severe risk evolving as a result. At this time, it remains apparent that tornado potential -- including risk for a couple of strong tornadoes -- should maximize across the Ozarks, and areas just north and south, as surface winds back to southeasterly ahead of the deepening/advancing surface low. The primary risk should evolve with an anticipated, broken band of storms within the cold-frontal zone, including embedded supercells. Along with the tornado potential, fairly widespread coverage of damaging wind gusts is also expected, as complex, LEWP/bow-type structures are expected within the band of storms, as convection advances eastward across Missouri and Arkansas toward the Mississippi Valley through the afternoon and into the evening hours. Severe risk is expected to expand as far north as southeastern Iowa and adjacent western Illinois this evening, where weaker instability is expected, and as far south as eastern Texas where a weaker wind field with southward extent should limit severe potential on the southern fringe. Risk should very gradually diminish overnight as convection shifts eastward across the Mid-Mississippi Valley. Read more

SPC Apr 20, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

4 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0253 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025 Valid 202000Z - 211200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHERN ARKANSAS AND MISSOURI VICINITY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are expected today across parts of the ArkLaTex into the Ozarks and mid Mississippi Valley, mainly this afternoon and evening. The best corridor for tornadoes (some of which could be strong) and scattered to numerous damaging winds should exist from central/northern Arkansas into Missouri. ...20z Update.. A broken line of thunderstorm activity continues near the surface low in northeastern OK/southeastern KS and along an attendant surface cold front extending from eastern OK southward into northeastern Texas/southern Arkansas. This activity is expected to continue to shift north and eastward through time as the low tracks to the east through the afternoon and evening. Storm intensity has been increasing over the last couple of hours, owing to daytime heating ahead of the front, where MLCAPE around 500-1500 J/kg is observed in surface objective analysis. VAD profiles across eastern Arkansas northward into Missouri show strong low-level shear in place, with large curved hodographs and rich low-level SRH. This trend will continue with the strengthening low-level jet lifting through the Mississippi Valley into the Midwest this evening, supporting risk for embedded supercells and tornadoes, a few of which may be strong. In addition to the tornado threat, bowing structures along the front will support risk for damaging winds. See MCD#502 and MCD#504 for more information. Thunderstorm coverage will increase along the southern portion of the front in central/eastern Texas into Louisiana through the afternoon and evening. This region is somewhat removed from the area of greater low and mid-level flow, which will keep severe potential more limited. See previous discussion for more information. ..Thornton/Goss.. 04/20/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1129 AM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025/ ...Synopsis... A compact upper low currently moving into western Oklahoma will shift quickly northeastward this afternoon and tonight, crossing eastern Kansas and western Missouri this evening and then continuing northeastward across Iowa and into Wisconsin tonight. Fast southwesterly flow aloft will exist in advance of this system, within the tight height gradient between this feature and the persistent ridge centered over the Southeast. At the surface, a developing low analyzed over western Oklahoma at 15Z is forecast to progress northeastward across southeastern Kansas and Missouri through the afternoon, and then should continue northward toward -- and eventually into -- southern Wisconsin by early Monday morning. While a warm front lifts northward across the Mid Mississippi Valley/Midwest, a cold front trailing from the low will sweep eastward into/across Missouri and Arkansas this afternoon and evening, and then across the Mid and Lower Mississippi Valleys through the end of the period. ...Northeastern Texas northeastward to the western Illinois vicinity... An expansive area of multi-level cloud cover, along with ongoing convection, is evident across western and northern portions of the risk area late this morning, which continues to retard more substantial heating at this point. With that said, some breaks in the clouds are evident per recent visible imagery as far west as eastern Oklahoma, with thinning cloud cover with eastward/northeastward extent into Arkansas and the Ozarks. As the surface low over Oklahoma deepens through the day in tandem with the advance of the upper low, northward advance of the warm front with time will allow a moist boundary layer to likewise overspread much of Missouri and Illinois through sunset. This, combined with at least modest heating across portions of the area should yield an amply unstable environment (500 to near 1500 J/kg mixed-layer CAPE) to gradually evolve -- supporting a steady increase in convective coverage and intensity this afternoon. In contrast to the rather modest thermodynamic environment, a very favorable low-level and deep-layer wind field is evident, with respect to development of organized/rotating storms. An 80 kt mid-level jet will spread northeastward across the risk area with time, atop a 50-plus kt low-level jet. This will support vigorous updraft evolution, with all-hazards severe risk evolving as a result. At this time, it remains apparent that tornado potential -- including risk for a couple of strong tornadoes -- should maximize across the Ozarks, and areas just north and south, as surface winds back to southeasterly ahead of the deepening/advancing surface low. The primary risk should evolve with an anticipated, broken band of storms within the cold-frontal zone, including embedded supercells. Along with the tornado potential, fairly widespread coverage of damaging wind gusts is also expected, as complex, LEWP/bow-type structures are expected within the band of storms, as convection advances eastward across Missouri and Arkansas toward the Mississippi Valley through the afternoon and into the evening hours. Severe risk is expected to expand as far north as southeastern Iowa and adjacent western Illinois this evening, where weaker instability is expected, and as far south as eastern Texas where a weaker wind field with southward extent should limit severe potential on the southern fringe. Risk should very gradually diminish overnight as convection shifts eastward across the Mid-Mississippi Valley. Read more

SPC Apr 20, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

4 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0253 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025 Valid 202000Z - 211200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHERN ARKANSAS AND MISSOURI VICINITY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are expected today across parts of the ArkLaTex into the Ozarks and mid Mississippi Valley, mainly this afternoon and evening. The best corridor for tornadoes (some of which could be strong) and scattered to numerous damaging winds should exist from central/northern Arkansas into Missouri. ...20z Update.. A broken line of thunderstorm activity continues near the surface low in northeastern OK/southeastern KS and along an attendant surface cold front extending from eastern OK southward into northeastern Texas/southern Arkansas. This activity is expected to continue to shift north and eastward through time as the low tracks to the east through the afternoon and evening. Storm intensity has been increasing over the last couple of hours, owing to daytime heating ahead of the front, where MLCAPE around 500-1500 J/kg is observed in surface objective analysis. VAD profiles across eastern Arkansas northward into Missouri show strong low-level shear in place, with large curved hodographs and rich low-level SRH. This trend will continue with the strengthening low-level jet lifting through the Mississippi Valley into the Midwest this evening, supporting risk for embedded supercells and tornadoes, a few of which may be strong. In addition to the tornado threat, bowing structures along the front will support risk for damaging winds. See MCD#502 and MCD#504 for more information. Thunderstorm coverage will increase along the southern portion of the front in central/eastern Texas into Louisiana through the afternoon and evening. This region is somewhat removed from the area of greater low and mid-level flow, which will keep severe potential more limited. See previous discussion for more information. ..Thornton/Goss.. 04/20/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1129 AM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025/ ...Synopsis... A compact upper low currently moving into western Oklahoma will shift quickly northeastward this afternoon and tonight, crossing eastern Kansas and western Missouri this evening and then continuing northeastward across Iowa and into Wisconsin tonight. Fast southwesterly flow aloft will exist in advance of this system, within the tight height gradient between this feature and the persistent ridge centered over the Southeast. At the surface, a developing low analyzed over western Oklahoma at 15Z is forecast to progress northeastward across southeastern Kansas and Missouri through the afternoon, and then should continue northward toward -- and eventually into -- southern Wisconsin by early Monday morning. While a warm front lifts northward across the Mid Mississippi Valley/Midwest, a cold front trailing from the low will sweep eastward into/across Missouri and Arkansas this afternoon and evening, and then across the Mid and Lower Mississippi Valleys through the end of the period. ...Northeastern Texas northeastward to the western Illinois vicinity... An expansive area of multi-level cloud cover, along with ongoing convection, is evident across western and northern portions of the risk area late this morning, which continues to retard more substantial heating at this point. With that said, some breaks in the clouds are evident per recent visible imagery as far west as eastern Oklahoma, with thinning cloud cover with eastward/northeastward extent into Arkansas and the Ozarks. As the surface low over Oklahoma deepens through the day in tandem with the advance of the upper low, northward advance of the warm front with time will allow a moist boundary layer to likewise overspread much of Missouri and Illinois through sunset. This, combined with at least modest heating across portions of the area should yield an amply unstable environment (500 to near 1500 J/kg mixed-layer CAPE) to gradually evolve -- supporting a steady increase in convective coverage and intensity this afternoon. In contrast to the rather modest thermodynamic environment, a very favorable low-level and deep-layer wind field is evident, with respect to development of organized/rotating storms. An 80 kt mid-level jet will spread northeastward across the risk area with time, atop a 50-plus kt low-level jet. This will support vigorous updraft evolution, with all-hazards severe risk evolving as a result. At this time, it remains apparent that tornado potential -- including risk for a couple of strong tornadoes -- should maximize across the Ozarks, and areas just north and south, as surface winds back to southeasterly ahead of the deepening/advancing surface low. The primary risk should evolve with an anticipated, broken band of storms within the cold-frontal zone, including embedded supercells. Along with the tornado potential, fairly widespread coverage of damaging wind gusts is also expected, as complex, LEWP/bow-type structures are expected within the band of storms, as convection advances eastward across Missouri and Arkansas toward the Mississippi Valley through the afternoon and into the evening hours. Severe risk is expected to expand as far north as southeastern Iowa and adjacent western Illinois this evening, where weaker instability is expected, and as far south as eastern Texas where a weaker wind field with southward extent should limit severe potential on the southern fringe. Risk should very gradually diminish overnight as convection shifts eastward across the Mid-Mississippi Valley. Read more

SPC Apr 20, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

4 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0253 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025 Valid 202000Z - 211200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHERN ARKANSAS AND MISSOURI VICINITY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are expected today across parts of the ArkLaTex into the Ozarks and mid Mississippi Valley, mainly this afternoon and evening. The best corridor for tornadoes (some of which could be strong) and scattered to numerous damaging winds should exist from central/northern Arkansas into Missouri. ...20z Update.. A broken line of thunderstorm activity continues near the surface low in northeastern OK/southeastern KS and along an attendant surface cold front extending from eastern OK southward into northeastern Texas/southern Arkansas. This activity is expected to continue to shift north and eastward through time as the low tracks to the east through the afternoon and evening. Storm intensity has been increasing over the last couple of hours, owing to daytime heating ahead of the front, where MLCAPE around 500-1500 J/kg is observed in surface objective analysis. VAD profiles across eastern Arkansas northward into Missouri show strong low-level shear in place, with large curved hodographs and rich low-level SRH. This trend will continue with the strengthening low-level jet lifting through the Mississippi Valley into the Midwest this evening, supporting risk for embedded supercells and tornadoes, a few of which may be strong. In addition to the tornado threat, bowing structures along the front will support risk for damaging winds. See MCD#502 and MCD#504 for more information. Thunderstorm coverage will increase along the southern portion of the front in central/eastern Texas into Louisiana through the afternoon and evening. This region is somewhat removed from the area of greater low and mid-level flow, which will keep severe potential more limited. See previous discussion for more information. ..Thornton/Goss.. 04/20/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1129 AM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025/ ...Synopsis... A compact upper low currently moving into western Oklahoma will shift quickly northeastward this afternoon and tonight, crossing eastern Kansas and western Missouri this evening and then continuing northeastward across Iowa and into Wisconsin tonight. Fast southwesterly flow aloft will exist in advance of this system, within the tight height gradient between this feature and the persistent ridge centered over the Southeast. At the surface, a developing low analyzed over western Oklahoma at 15Z is forecast to progress northeastward across southeastern Kansas and Missouri through the afternoon, and then should continue northward toward -- and eventually into -- southern Wisconsin by early Monday morning. While a warm front lifts northward across the Mid Mississippi Valley/Midwest, a cold front trailing from the low will sweep eastward into/across Missouri and Arkansas this afternoon and evening, and then across the Mid and Lower Mississippi Valleys through the end of the period. ...Northeastern Texas northeastward to the western Illinois vicinity... An expansive area of multi-level cloud cover, along with ongoing convection, is evident across western and northern portions of the risk area late this morning, which continues to retard more substantial heating at this point. With that said, some breaks in the clouds are evident per recent visible imagery as far west as eastern Oklahoma, with thinning cloud cover with eastward/northeastward extent into Arkansas and the Ozarks. As the surface low over Oklahoma deepens through the day in tandem with the advance of the upper low, northward advance of the warm front with time will allow a moist boundary layer to likewise overspread much of Missouri and Illinois through sunset. This, combined with at least modest heating across portions of the area should yield an amply unstable environment (500 to near 1500 J/kg mixed-layer CAPE) to gradually evolve -- supporting a steady increase in convective coverage and intensity this afternoon. In contrast to the rather modest thermodynamic environment, a very favorable low-level and deep-layer wind field is evident, with respect to development of organized/rotating storms. An 80 kt mid-level jet will spread northeastward across the risk area with time, atop a 50-plus kt low-level jet. This will support vigorous updraft evolution, with all-hazards severe risk evolving as a result. At this time, it remains apparent that tornado potential -- including risk for a couple of strong tornadoes -- should maximize across the Ozarks, and areas just north and south, as surface winds back to southeasterly ahead of the deepening/advancing surface low. The primary risk should evolve with an anticipated, broken band of storms within the cold-frontal zone, including embedded supercells. Along with the tornado potential, fairly widespread coverage of damaging wind gusts is also expected, as complex, LEWP/bow-type structures are expected within the band of storms, as convection advances eastward across Missouri and Arkansas toward the Mississippi Valley through the afternoon and into the evening hours. Severe risk is expected to expand as far north as southeastern Iowa and adjacent western Illinois this evening, where weaker instability is expected, and as far south as eastern Texas where a weaker wind field with southward extent should limit severe potential on the southern fringe. Risk should very gradually diminish overnight as convection shifts eastward across the Mid-Mississippi Valley. Read more

SPC Apr 20, 2025 2000 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

4 months 3 weeks ago
SPC 2000Z Day 1 Outlook
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0253 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025 Valid 202000Z - 211200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHERN ARKANSAS AND MISSOURI VICINITY... ...SUMMARY... Severe thunderstorms are expected today across parts of the ArkLaTex into the Ozarks and mid Mississippi Valley, mainly this afternoon and evening. The best corridor for tornadoes (some of which could be strong) and scattered to numerous damaging winds should exist from central/northern Arkansas into Missouri. ...20z Update.. A broken line of thunderstorm activity continues near the surface low in northeastern OK/southeastern KS and along an attendant surface cold front extending from eastern OK southward into northeastern Texas/southern Arkansas. This activity is expected to continue to shift north and eastward through time as the low tracks to the east through the afternoon and evening. Storm intensity has been increasing over the last couple of hours, owing to daytime heating ahead of the front, where MLCAPE around 500-1500 J/kg is observed in surface objective analysis. VAD profiles across eastern Arkansas northward into Missouri show strong low-level shear in place, with large curved hodographs and rich low-level SRH. This trend will continue with the strengthening low-level jet lifting through the Mississippi Valley into the Midwest this evening, supporting risk for embedded supercells and tornadoes, a few of which may be strong. In addition to the tornado threat, bowing structures along the front will support risk for damaging winds. See MCD#502 and MCD#504 for more information. Thunderstorm coverage will increase along the southern portion of the front in central/eastern Texas into Louisiana through the afternoon and evening. This region is somewhat removed from the area of greater low and mid-level flow, which will keep severe potential more limited. See previous discussion for more information. ..Thornton/Goss.. 04/20/2025 .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1129 AM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025/ ...Synopsis... A compact upper low currently moving into western Oklahoma will shift quickly northeastward this afternoon and tonight, crossing eastern Kansas and western Missouri this evening and then continuing northeastward across Iowa and into Wisconsin tonight. Fast southwesterly flow aloft will exist in advance of this system, within the tight height gradient between this feature and the persistent ridge centered over the Southeast. At the surface, a developing low analyzed over western Oklahoma at 15Z is forecast to progress northeastward across southeastern Kansas and Missouri through the afternoon, and then should continue northward toward -- and eventually into -- southern Wisconsin by early Monday morning. While a warm front lifts northward across the Mid Mississippi Valley/Midwest, a cold front trailing from the low will sweep eastward into/across Missouri and Arkansas this afternoon and evening, and then across the Mid and Lower Mississippi Valleys through the end of the period. ...Northeastern Texas northeastward to the western Illinois vicinity... An expansive area of multi-level cloud cover, along with ongoing convection, is evident across western and northern portions of the risk area late this morning, which continues to retard more substantial heating at this point. With that said, some breaks in the clouds are evident per recent visible imagery as far west as eastern Oklahoma, with thinning cloud cover with eastward/northeastward extent into Arkansas and the Ozarks. As the surface low over Oklahoma deepens through the day in tandem with the advance of the upper low, northward advance of the warm front with time will allow a moist boundary layer to likewise overspread much of Missouri and Illinois through sunset. This, combined with at least modest heating across portions of the area should yield an amply unstable environment (500 to near 1500 J/kg mixed-layer CAPE) to gradually evolve -- supporting a steady increase in convective coverage and intensity this afternoon. In contrast to the rather modest thermodynamic environment, a very favorable low-level and deep-layer wind field is evident, with respect to development of organized/rotating storms. An 80 kt mid-level jet will spread northeastward across the risk area with time, atop a 50-plus kt low-level jet. This will support vigorous updraft evolution, with all-hazards severe risk evolving as a result. At this time, it remains apparent that tornado potential -- including risk for a couple of strong tornadoes -- should maximize across the Ozarks, and areas just north and south, as surface winds back to southeasterly ahead of the deepening/advancing surface low. The primary risk should evolve with an anticipated, broken band of storms within the cold-frontal zone, including embedded supercells. Along with the tornado potential, fairly widespread coverage of damaging wind gusts is also expected, as complex, LEWP/bow-type structures are expected within the band of storms, as convection advances eastward across Missouri and Arkansas toward the Mississippi Valley through the afternoon and into the evening hours. Severe risk is expected to expand as far north as southeastern Iowa and adjacent western Illinois this evening, where weaker instability is expected, and as far south as eastern Texas where a weaker wind field with southward extent should limit severe potential on the southern fringe. Risk should very gradually diminish overnight as convection shifts eastward across the Mid-Mississippi Valley. Read more