• MESO: Mesoscale Discussion 1348

    From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/127 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jun 27 17:41:09 2026
    ACUS11 KWNS 271741
    SWOMCD
    SPC MCD 271740=20
    MTZ000-WYZ000-272015-

    Mesoscale Discussion 1348
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1240 PM CDT Sat Jun 27 2026

    Areas affected...eastern Montana and northeast Wyoming

    Concerning...Severe potential...Watch likely=20

    Valid 271740Z - 272015Z

    Probability of Watch Issuance...95 percent

    SUMMARY...Severe storms are expected to develop by 19-20Z with an
    associated risk for wind gusts of 80+ mph, large to very large hail
    of 2+ inches, and perhaps a tornado or two. A watch is likely.

    DISCUSSION...Latest mesoanalysis placed a surface low over far
    southeast MT or northeast WY with an associated stationary front or
    trough stretching from northwest ND to the vicinity of the Big Horn
    Mountains in north-central WY. A corridor of higher boundary-layer
    moisture content resides along and to the north of the front, which
    coincides with the northern edge of an EML plume, supporting MLCAPE
    of 1000-1500 J/kg, per latest objective analysis. Daytime heating
    and increasing height falls/forcing for ascent are expected to
    support further air mass destabilization by early to mid afternoon,
    while a capping inversion for surface-based parcels becomes
    progressively weaker.

    Latest short-term model guidance indicates an increased likelihood
    of surface-based thunderstorm development by 19-20Z along the Big
    Horn Mountains. That notion is corroborated by the deepening cumulus
    field along that terrain feature, per recent visible satellite
    trends. RAP-based forecast soundings in that area indicate 40-50 kt
    of north-northeast deep-layer shear supportive of supercells as the
    initial storm mode with the primary hazard being large to very large
    hail. While low-level shear isn't forecast to be particularly
    strong, the presence of the front may serve as a local vorticity
    source for some tornado threat. By late afternoon into early
    evening, there is good model agreement in storms coalescing into a broader-scale, bowing structure capable of swaths of damaging winds,
    including gusts of 80+ mph.

    ..Mead/Guyer.. 06/27/2026

    ...Please see https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://www.spc.noaa.gov__;!!DZ3fj= g!4GwJrPwTKH9B8hI4gMu6u_mGD5Y6-19avd9h-fbm-_bgudH0cUl6RMIZ6AEmRZUoXlnZwhnqe= z0bQGrU22gU7xfF7H0$ for graphic product...

    ATTN...WFO...UNR...BYZ...GGW...RIW...

    LAT...LON 44850544 44650596 44430686 44790821 45260856 46460754
    47520711 47920690 48380577 48090460 47800451 46950419
    46080435 45130465 44850544=20

    MOST PROBABLE PEAK TORNADO INTENSITY...85-110 MPH
    MOST PROBABLE PEAK WIND GUST...75-90 MPH
    MOST PROBABLE PEAK HAIL SIZE...2.00-3.50 IN


    =3D =3D =3D
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    * Origin: Capitol City Weather Station (1:2320/127)