Severe storms will impact multiple parts of the country this week, including the Mid-Atlantic, Southern Plains and Southeast.

A Severe Thunderstorm Watch out for portions of northern New Mexico, northern Texas, and southern Oklahoma were in effect Monday morning by 7 a.m.

More than 18 million people are under a risk for severe storms Monday across two distinct areas of the country: portions of southern Colorado, northeastern Texas, northern Louisiana, southern Arkansas, southern Mississippi, southern Alabama then a secondary area across the Mid-Atlantic including parts of eastern Virginia, eastern Maryland, and Delaware.

Cities that have the best chance to receive the severe storms capable of possible tornadoes, large hail exceeding 2 inches in diameter, and damaging winds include Dallas, Waco, and Meridian, Texas. The timing of the storms will be this afternoon into this evening.

For the Mid-Atlantic (including the I-95 corridor), timing of the storms capable of damaging winds and hail could be during the peak of Monday evening’s rush hour. Washington, D.C., Philadelphia and New York City, while not in the zone of highest risk for severe storms, could experience an isolated strong storm or two.

On Tuesday, almost 17 million people are under a risk of severe storms across portions of northeastern Texas, southern Arkansas, northern Louisiana, central Mississippi, central Alabama, and southern Georgia.

Cities that have the best chance to receive severe weather including large hail and damaging winds are Dallas, Shreveport, Jackson, Birmingham, and Columbus, Georgia. The timing of the storms will be afternoon and evening.

The risk continues into Wednesday, where more than 6 million people are already under a risk of severe storms across portions of central Mississippi, southern Alabama, and southern Georgia.

Cities that will need to be on guard Wednesday include Montgomery and Tuscaloosa, Alabama; Jackson, Mississippi and Savannah, Georgia. The timing of the storms will once again be Wednesday afternoon into evening.

In addition to the risk for severe storms, flash flooding will also be a concern across parts of the Plains as well as the Southeast.

On Monday morning, there was a Flood Watch for much of northeastern Colorado, including the Denver and Colorado Springs metro areas.

With several rounds of severe storms expected in many of the same areas across parts of the Southern Plains and Southeast, flood concerns will be an issue due to the likelihood for intense precipitation rates leading to high rainfall totals.

In portions of northern Texas, southern Oklahoma, southern Arkansas, central Mississippi, central Alabama, and central Georgia, locally up to 4 inches of rain can be expected through Tuesday with rainfall rates reaching 2 inches an hour at times. By the end of the week, some areas across the Southeast may pick up 4 to 8 inches of rain.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Black franchise owner sues McDonald’s, cites persistent bias

CLEVELAND — The Black owner of 14 McDonald’s franchises says the company…

8 dead, 89 infected after Covid outbreak at Connecticut nursing home

Eight residents of a Connecticut nursing home have died since the start…

Temporary cease-fire declared in two Ukrainian cities to let civilians evacuate

Russia said Saturday it was observing a temporary cease-fire in the key…

CNN Closes Offices as Covid-19 Cases Rise

CNN is closing its offices to nonessential employees, network President Jeff Zucker…