After the record-breaking rainfall experienced last night, we're once again caught in the middle of a miniature War zone along the east coast. A quasi-stationary frontal boundary (warm and cold front collide and stall) is draped from New England all the way down into Florida, and this combined with copious amounts of tropical moisture surging northward from the Western Atlantic has produced flooding rainfall across much of the Mid Atlantic.
Intense bursts of rainfall will intermingle with lighter but steady rainfall as independent bands move northward from Virginia. Expect anywhere from 2 to 6 more inches of rainfall before everything finally makes its way out of the region by Friday.
Even with the passage of this stationary front by the end of the week, little ripples in the upper atmosphere may initiate showers and thunderstorms over the weekend.
Stay up to date with the latest traffic information at Maryland Department of Transportation's website
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Washout!
By Lee Carlaw On Monday, June 26, 2006 At 7:29 PM
thanks for the kind words Jessica...I've been busy lately with work at goddard space flight center, and have been working on a new template for the site (the old one looks crappy to me).
Anyway...thanks for the tip, I will definately try it out