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Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Sioux Falls, SD
Issued by NWS Sioux Falls, SD
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350 FXUS63 KFSD 220538 AFDFSD Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Sioux Falls SD 1238 AM CDT Sat Jun 22 2024 .KEY MESSAGES... - Widespread severe thunderstorm activity has dissipated. Lighter showers and thunderstorms continue over southwestern Minnesota and northwestern Iowa. These are expected to move to the east overnight. - Ongoing flooding may worsen as the runoff from tonight`s storms makes its way to the waterways. Record river flooding is likely on several basins. - Conditions will quiet down through the upcoming weekend into early next week. Temperatures remain near seasonal normals. - Pattern through next week doesn`t favor any long duration rain, but several brief risks for passing convection. && .DISCUSSION... Issued at 244 PM CDT Fri Jun 21 2024 THIS Afternoon: Pesky elevated convection continues along an 850 frontal zone just north of I-90 this afternoon. Weak mid-lvl wave is beginning to push into central South Dakota this afternoon and should help serve as a focal point for renewed convection later this afternoon evening. At the surface, a stationary boundary is meandering through northeast Nebraska into portions of northwest Iowa. It`s difficult to say if much more northward progression of the front will take place, given cool outflow from convection to the north. Further south within the warm sector, we`re gradually reaching convective temperatures spring isolated to scattered convection to form. THIS EVENING and TONIGHT: We`ll begin to see additional convection develop later this afternoon along and north of the surface front. Soundings again reveal a fairly large and tall CAPE profile, suggesting upwards of 1500-2000 J/KG MLCAPE across the MO river valley into northwest Iowa. Most of the warm sector will reside on the edge of the best area of effective shear, though with values approaching 40 knots near the front, some supercells will be possible. Hail potentially up to 1.5" may be possible, but moist soundings may limit overall wind potential. The coupling of 250-300 J/KG and 0-1km helicity approaching 100-150 m2/s2 could lead to a confined risk of a tornado or two along the front early this evening. Perhaps the greatest concern will once again be from heavy rainfall. Convection forming along the boundary will be very slow moving, likely drifting east and then southeast as cold pools develop. The environment remains very primed for heavy rainfall with PWAT values pushing 200% of normal, deep warm cloud layer, and a classic setup for training along the warm front this evening. CAMs all support high rainfall rates as high as 2-3" per hour, leading to the potential of widespread 2 to 5" rainfall totals across southeastern South Dakota and Northwestern Iowa, generally between I-90 and Highway 20 by midnight. The only caveat is if activity can become a bit more forward propagating than some CAMS suggest. Convection may be a bit more isolated to scattered further north towards Highway 14 as convection further south interrupts the low- lvl flow. The initial burst of heavy convection may linger through midnight before propagating east of the CWA. However, a secondary shortwave moving out of western South Dakota may bring another complex of storms eastwards. CAMS are more conflicted on if this system will bring a secondary risk for heavy convection within a linear band north of I-90 through daybreak. SATURDAY: Elevated convection may continue deep into the morning hours of Saturday before shortwave energy drives the baroclinic zone eastward. Cooler temperatures and dry conditions then move into the region for the rest of the day Saturday. SUNDAY: Increasing heights over the Plains leads to a warmer day on Sunday which is desperately needed after multiple rounds of rain. Temperatures rise into the 80s. MONDAY-FRIDAY: The pattern relents for much of the upcoming week, but that doesn`t mean we`re out of the woods. A quasi- zonal flow through mid-week will allow at least one progressive risk for thunderstorms in the region Monday night as a front drops in from the northwest. Thankfully with mid-lvl heights rising over the Rockies, this should drive the associated front well south of the CWA by Wednesday and Thursday. However, we just can`t shake the rain risks, as most medium range models show aggressive return flow moving back into the Plains by the end of next week. && .AVIATION /06Z TAFS THROUGH 06Z SUNDAY/... Issued at 1235 AM CDT Sat Jun 22 2024 Showers and thunderstorms continue over southeastern South Dakota, southwestern Minnesota, and northwestern Iowa this morning. Expect these showers to push east through the overnight. Showers are expected to be clear of the area by the afternoon. Current ceilings are a mixture of VFR west of I-29 to MVFR-LIFR over southwestern Minnesota and northwestern Iowa. As the showers push off, expect ceilings to lift to IFR. Skies will clear from west to east as we approach the evening. VFR conditions are expected to prevail for the rest of the period. Winds will become light and variable after storms clear. By mid- morning winds will become north-northwesterly around 10 kts. && .HYDROLOGY... Issued at 244 PM CDT Fri Jun 21 2024 No changes to the ongoing flood watch for the forecast area. Models in strong agreement that a focal point for heavy rain will develop this evening south of I-90 and north of Highway 20. Potential rainfall totals of 2 to 5" may be possible, which may lead to even worsening conditions on many area rivers, and increasing the potential for widespread areal flooding. Some river basins may see record flooding over the upcoming days. && .FSD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... SD...Flood Watch until 7 AM CDT this morning for SDZ038>040-050- 052>071. MN...Flood Watch until 7 AM CDT this morning for MNZ071-072-080-081- 089-090-097-098. IA...Flood Watch until 7 AM CDT this morning for IAZ001>003-012>014- 020>022. NE...Flood Watch until 7 AM CDT this morning for NEZ013. && $$ DISCUSSION...Dux AVIATION...AJP HYDROLOGY...Dux