


Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Marquette, MI
Issued by NWS Marquette, MI
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903 FXUS63 KMQT 161900 AFDMQT Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Marquette MI 300 PM EDT Mon Jun 16 2025 .KEY MESSAGES... - Strong or severe storms are possible (5-15% chance) this evening across western Lake Superior and the west half of Upper Michigan. Damaging winds and large hail are the primary risks. - Shower and thunderstorm chances return Wednesday into Wednesday night, mainly for the central and east thirds of Upper Michigan. Scattered showers/storms expected Thursday across Upper Michigan. - Near normal temperatures this week trend above normal by late this coming weekend. && .SHORT TERM /THROUGH TUESDAY NIGHT/... Issued at 226 PM EDT Mon Jun 16 2025 Partly to overcast skies have, more or less, sat over the forecast area today under light, southerly flow. What appeared to be a gravity wave pressing through the region around mid-morning helped kick off weak showers over parts of the interior west and east, but overall, Upper Michigan has been mostly dry so far. Temperatures have warmed into the 70s so far with dewpoints in the muggy 60s to upper 50s. Upstream, a surface low reinforced by a shortwave in western Minnesota/Dakotas supported showers and thunderstorms earlier. These waned some but recently began to reorganize. For the remainder of the afternoon, destabilization to 1000-2000 j/kg MUCAPE with overall weak isentropic ascent and deep layer 0-6km shear near 30kts may support isolated to scattered showers developing, perhaps mixed in with a rumble of thunder across mainly the interior western half. Outside of this, mostly dry conditions are expected for the rest of the afternoon. Upstream in Minnesota where there`s better forcing, thunderstorm activity is expected to increase as the surface low presses eastward toward Duluth and the Arrowhead. Near 0-2z CAMS suggest a line of thunderstorms will press into Lake Superior, then separate into 2 clusters as they approach western Upper Michigan thereafter. The southern segment looks to dive southeastward along the state line while the northern segment presses east-northeast toward Isle Royale/Thunder Bay. There are still some outlier models suggesting the system holds together, but this is appearing to be increasingly less likely given the weakening trend of these storms due to decreasing instability and only modest shear. However, initially, there is a small window where enough instability and shear could support strong to severe thunderstorm activity within the southern segment. Main areas for severe potential continue to be western Lake Superior, western Upper Michigan, and south-central near the WI/MI state line. If something is able to get going and then maintain itself into our forecast area, strong to damaging winds and hail to 1 inch would be the main severe weather risks. Outside of this, strong storms may be embedded within the cluster moving toward Isle Royale/Thunder Bay this evening. Thunderstorm activity may continue after midnight, mainly in north-central Lake Superior, south-central and eastern Upper Michigan, but the storms will weaken through the night. By Tuesday morning, the surface low is expected to be near Isle Royale. There may be precip closer to the low, as well as scattered showers/storms in the east, but these should end by mid-morning. Tuesday appears to be mainly dry afterwards. Daytime highs look to warm to near 70 by Lake Superior and mid 70s to low 80s elsewhere. Tuesday night also looks to be dry. Overnight lows look to fall mostly into the 50s. && .LONG TERM /WEDNESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY/... Issued at 226 PM EDT Mon Jun 16 2025 Weak, quasi-zonal flow Wednesday will stretch across the Northern Tier, sitting atop broad troughing and multiple shortwaves across central CONUS. At the surface, a cold front will stretch southwest from southern Ontario/Lake Huron into the middle-Mississippi River Valley. Upper level forcing from the initial shortwave will support showers and thunderstorms in Iowa/Illinois/Missouri early Wednesday. As the day evolves, this wave lifts northeast and stretches into the Upper Great Lakes along the aforementioned frontal boundary. Past 24 hours of EC/GEFS ensemble guidance has resulted in tighter clustering of surface low locations as it tracks northeast. There is still some spread though, which is reflected in the timing differences in the deterministic suites. Overall though, these continue to suggest the greatest potential for showers/thunderstorms will be over the central and eastern portions of the forecast area. Temporally speaking, there has been a little better focus on activity being late morning to evening hours central and late afternoon potentially into Thursday morning in the east. Between the LREF and NBM, probability of exceeding 0.5 inches of QPF range from 25-50% in these locations, with less in the west, which values there generally represent the ensemble outliers. Upstream in Ontario/Manitoba/Northern Plains Wednesday, a cold front is expected to press southeastward, moving into the forecast area on Thursday. This front will swing through Upper Michigan Thursday afternoon and evening, likely resulting in scattered showers and thunderstorms across the region. Upper level ridging builds into the Central Plains Friday while a surface high stretches into the Upper Great Lakes. This largely looks to keep us dry through the day. However, a ridge roller pressing eastward along the ridge top will press eastward through the day. Guidance continues to highlight this pressing into Upper Michigan Friday evening/early Saturday. Afterwards, the ridge will shift southeast into the South while a deep trough presses through the Rockies. This will result in an amplified trough/ridge pattern across CONUS. The first wave/warm front ejecting out of the trough may move through the region Sunday. Temperatures in this forecast period are largely expected to trend upwards in time, with near normal temperatures becoming above normal. Expect 60s and 70s to become widespread mid 80s by Sunday as dewpoints climb into the upper 60s. Overnight lows follow the same pattern, with 40s and 50s becoming widespread 60s by Sunday night. && .AVIATION /18Z TAFS THROUGH 18Z TUESDAY/... Issued at 123 PM EDT Mon Jun 16 2025 Ongoing MVFR ceilings at KIWD and KCMX should improve to VFR this afternoon. Showers and thunderstorms are expected to develop upstream, then press into Upper Michigan this evening into tonight. All sites could see precipitation, but greatest confidence is KIWD. Where confidence is lacking, Prob30 groups were included. Increased moisture will also result in ceilings lowering to MVFR this evening/tonight at all sites, and then IFR at KIWD/KCMX by morning. IFR visibility may also occur at KCMX by Tuesday morning. Low level jet moving over the area tonight may also support modest LLWS at KSAW and gusty winds near 20kts at all sites. && .MARINE... Issued at 259 PM EDT Mon Jun 16 2025 A marginal risk continues for severe wind gusts up to 34 knots and hail up to 1 inch over the far western waters this evening/tonight. Outside of any thunderstorms, southerly winds will also gust up to 20 to 25 knots tonight through tomorrow, eventually becoming west-southwesterly in the wake of a cold front. In addition, patchy dense fog <1mi will remain a threat tonight as well over the west half of the lake (40-50% chance). West-southwesterly winds will gust to 20 to 25 knots through early Tuesday afternoon before finally falling below 20 knots. At that point, light and variable winds will prevail into Thursday when gusts in the 15 to 20 knot range return through the weekend. && .MQT WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... Upper Michigan... None. Lake Superior... None. Lake Michigan... None. && $$ SHORT TERM...JTP LONG TERM...JTP AVIATION...JTP MARINE...TDUD