Washingtonpost
Snowstorm plastering Rockies will hit Plains amid post-Thanksgiving travel
E.Martin3 months ago
Return-from-Thanksgiving travel is looking dicey across portions of the Intermountain West and Plains. The season’s first widespread, significant snowfall is plastering the Rockies, and will sweep across the Central States with plowable snow from the Canadian Border to Kansas. Want to know how your actions can help make a difference for our planet? , in your inbox every Tuesday and Thursday. Winter storm warnings blanket much of Wyoming, Nebraska and Kansas, while winter weather advisories reach down to northwest Oklahoma and the Texas Panhandle. The snow is winding down in Denver, but the risk of snow is increasing ever-closer to Kansas City. The snowstorm heralds a dramatic drop in temperatures that will spill across much of the Lower 48. By Thursday morning next week, the National Weather Service is expecting morning lows in the 20s in at least 45 states across the continental U.S.
Where the snow is now
Scattered snow showers, some heavy, were present across Wyoming, southern Idaho, Colorado and Utah as of Friday morning. That was the result of moisture being pinwheeled north around a low pressure center, which was anchored in western Utah and shifting east. The activity was located beneath the pocket of high altitude cold air, low pressure and spin associated with our low pressure system. That fostered more ascent, or lift, to enhance snowfall rates. There was also a band of light to locally moderate snow in the Nebraska Sandhills and northwestern Kansas. This was the result of moisture advection, or the influx of moisture from the south. Some of the moisture, contained in slightly milder, less dense air, was riding up and over a lip of cold, dense air near the ground. As the moist air cooled, it released its excess moisture in the form of snowflakes. Accumulations of 3 to 5 inches are likely within this zone.How much has fallen thus far
According to Jonathan Erdman, a meteorologist at the Weather Company, Lander, Wyo., picked up 18.8 inches of snow on Thanksgiving. That’s nearly twice the November average. It was also the community’s snowiest day in almost a quarter century, Erdman said. Otherwise, here were some of the heftiest totals in the National Weather Service’s database:What’s next
Low pressure will shift east on Friday, causing the swirl of show showers to truck east with it. The high terrain of central and western Colorado will continue to see intermittent heavy snow, causing totals in the mountains to approach a foot. In Denver, only another inch or so is expected; winds locally may come from the north in the Mile-High City, inducing drying that could cut back on accumulations. By early Saturday, the low pressure system crosses into northwest Kansas. Snow will taper off into early Saturday across the Nebraska Panhandle and Sandhills. A cold front will trail southwest of the maturing low pressure system; along this front, a band of moderate snow is likely, and will persist for much of the day over central Kansas and south central Nebraska. Accumulations of 3 to 6 inches are likely in Kansas, with localized totals up to 8 inches around the intersection of Interstates 35 and 80. Farther south into northwest Oklahoma and the Texas Panhandle, mixed precipitation is anticipated. Places like Woodward, Okla., could see up to 3 inches of snow, along with a trace of an inch of icing. Kansas City could get into the action on Saturday evening, but it’s too early to the magnitude of any potential accumulations. The band of precipitation will begin to lose moisture, but swing northeast toward Chicago and the Great Lakes on Sunday as a new system swings in behind it out of the Upper Midwest. Behind the low pressure systems and cold front, Canadian high pressure will build in. By the middle of next week, overnight lows in the 20s could bleed as far south as North Texas and the mountains of North and South Carolina.Read the full article:https://www.washingtonpost.com/weather/2023/11/24/snowstorm-rockies-plains-thanksgiving-travel/
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