Severe storms threaten baseball-size hail to slice of Dakotas, Minnesota Saturday
While some strong thunderstorms were already underway early Saturday morning across the Dakotas, another round of severe weather was expected Saturday afternoon and into the evening as daytime heating will generate high levels of storm energy, according to the FOX Forecast Center.
Large hail and Damaging winds possible during Northern Plains severe threat
Areas of the Upper Midwest and Northern Plains are under a severe storm threat Saturday, with damaging winds and large hail as the main threats. Minneapolis and Rapid City, South Dakota are in the level 2 risk.
ST. CLOUD, Minn. -- Baseball-sized hail is among the dangerous threats posed by severe thunderstorms expected across parts of the Upper Midwest Saturday.
A low pressure system will develop across the northern Rockies and High Plains on Saturday, pulling in moisture from the south into the Dakotas, making the atmosphere quite humid.
While some strong thunderstorms were already underway early Saturday morning across the Dakotas, another round of severe weather was expected Saturday afternoon and into the evening as daytime heating will generate high levels of storm energy, according to the FOX Forecast Center.
With the potential for significant atmospheric instability and strong updrafts, there is a risk for very large hail of at least 3 inches in diameter - about the diameter of a baseball, plus damaging wind gusts between 60–80 mph and a few tornadoes.
NOAA's Storm Prediction Center has issued a Level 2 out of 5 risk of severe weather across the heart of Minnesota, stretching into South Dakota, Nebraska and even western Wisconsin. But the agency has painted an area of significant risk of large hail over western Minnesota, including St. Cloud, and a sliver of eastern South Dakota, including Watertown. The SPC had earlier Saturday also included the greater Minneapolis-St. Paul metro area, but removed the Twin Cities from the larger hail threat zone later in the morning.
THE 5-POINT SEVERE THUNDERSTORM RISK CATEGORY SCALE EXPLAINED
Given recent rounds of rain over the past week, flash flooding will also be a concern throughout the weekend.
By Sunday, the severe threat will begin to diminish and shift slightly eastward, the FOX Forecast Center says, with just a narrow stretch of a level 2 risk of severe weather stretching from about Waterloo, Iowa to Green Bay, Wisconsin.
As the low-pressure system in southern Canada continues moving east, the associated storm activity will shift with it, allowing the region to begin drying out into early next week.
Strong thunderstorms could bring brief damaging wind gusts to Northeast
Meanwhile, those in the Northeast and along the I-95 corridor could see a few rocking thunderstorms as the weekend kicks off.
A line of thunderstorms is expected to roll across Upstate New York and western Pennsylvania starting early Saturday afternoon, sweeping east toward the Interstate 95 corridor by late Saturday evening.
The storms could reach marginally severe levels, with damaging wind gusts up to 60 mph the most likely hazard aside from bursts of heavy rain and frequent lightning.
LIGHTNING SAFETY: WHEN THUNDER ROARS, EVEN TAKING OUT THE TRASH CAN TURN DEADLY
NOAA's SPC has a stripe of a Level 2 threat of severe weather covering parts of central Pennsylvania into Upstate New York. A Level 1 threat of severe weather covers New York City, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Washington, D.C. and Baltimore.