One of the strongest Pacific Storms since the 1970s is moving - TopicsExpress



          

One of the strongest Pacific Storms since the 1970s is moving toward Alaska with pressure possibly as low as 925mb (27.25) = intense with waves over 50 feet and 100mph winds. Its a hybrid storm with the remnants of Super Typhoon Nuri that is now becoming a cold core wrapped up storm (notice all the isobars in the video). What goes up in one part of the world, allows something else to go down and that down is a cold snap for Eastern North America through next weekend. Our video today shows the temperature forecast trends over the next 14 days with the big cold push clearly visible next week but then also a moderating/warmer trend for much of North America late in the period. So well have a week of cold weather but then it pushes out. Next we see the rain/snow storms traversing North America over the next two weeks with bigger snow storms limited to Canada but an Alberta Clipper type system may bring the seasons first accumulating light snowfall from South Dakota to Central Michigan next week. Dare we say it...maybe some snowflakes around the 15th from Philly to Boston - way out there but certainly the first wet snow flakes are possible with the cold shot. The 14-day forecast chart for Minneapolis shows the big chill followed by a big warm up and not quite as bad for New York City. You can see these 14-day forecast charts anywhere in the world at : weathertrends360/Charts
Posted on: Sat, 08 Nov 2014 09:05:06 +0000

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