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There will be multiple disturbances ongoing Tuesday, bringing unsettled weather to the Eastern Seaboard, Upper Midwest, and Pacific Northwest.
Rounds of snow and rain will continue throughout the day in the Pacific Northwest. High elevation snowfall will be prevalent across the Cascades and northern Rockies while low elevation rainfall, especially near the coastline of Oregon and Washington, will be present.
To the east of there, a cold front will bring rain showers to the Northern Plains and areas bordering Canada through northern Michigan throughout the day. However, in eastern Nebraska, eastern Kansas, western Missouri, and western Iowa, a potent day of severe weather will be on tap in the afternoon and evening. A risk of very large hail, damaging wind gusts, and a few tornadoes are possible. In the Southern Plains, the possibility of storms and showers exists during the evening hours.
Another cold front will be found draped across the Ohio Valley, creating a line of showers and possibly some rumbles of thunder. This line will move slowly during the morning hours from the Deep South to the Ohio Valley and reach the Atlantic coastline by nightfall. In the Northeast, these rain showers will linger longer than in other areas, as it will begin in the mid-afternoon and then taper off after midnight.
Otherwise, the rest of the nation will enjoy a calm and sunny day.
Afternoon temperatures will continue to stay seasonably warm in the Mid-Atlantic and the southern portion of the Northeast. Seventies and 80s will be found there and will also be the case for the Southeast, Deep South, Ohio Valley, and Mississippi Valley. In the Central and Southern Plains as well as the Desert Southwest, highs will climb up to the 80s and 90s. States bordering Canada will be a lot cooler, as temperatures will struggle to break the 50s and 60s. It will be coldest in the Pacific Northwest due to ongoing wintry weather. Temperatures will only reach the 40s and 50s generally speaking but the highest elevations may not break the 30s. Along the Pacific coastline, highs will be in the 50s and 60s.