National Weather Forecast
A couple of systems working into the central United States on Thursday will bring snowy weather from the Rockies to the Great Lakes and storms – some severe – across the Southern Plains and Mid-South. Drier weather is expected out west.
Heavy snow of a foot or more will be possible across portions of the Rockies and up around the Great Lakes through the end of the week. Meanwhile, rainfall amounts of 3”+ will be possible in the southern United States.
From northern Nebraska to central Minnesota, a band of at least 3-7” of snow is expected to fall through Friday as a system moves through. The heaviest snow will fall across portions of the Minnesota Arrowhead/North Shore of Lake Superior to northern Wisconsin and the U.P. of Michigan, where some of this snow will be lake-enhanced. With the combo of strong winds and falling snow, visibility will be greatly reduced across the region, causing hazardous travel conditions.
We’ll be tracking an area of low pressure across the southern United States, along with a cold front and dryline, which will help to spark a severe threat across the Southern Plains Thursday afternoon and Thursday night. An Enhanced Risk of severe weather (threat level 3 of 5) exists across portions of north-central/northeast Texas, southeastern Oklahoma, and southwestern Arkansas – including the Dallas metroplex, Tyler (TX), Texarkana (TX/AR), and Ardmore (OK). Very large hail, damaging winds, and a few tornadoes will be possible.
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