Chicago Weather Chicago, IL – Forecasters say residents of Illinois should be prepared for possibly the strongest storm of the state has seen in more than seven decades of advertising: The National Weather Service issued a wind warning in state 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. TuesdayTornado watches or warnings were issued for the Chicago area, parts of central, northwest and southern Illinois and in neighboring southern Indiana and Wisconsin.Weather Service meteorologist Jim Allsopp, the storm is expected to be one of the strongest to hit Iowa in 70 years.
Tornado watches were given warnings for the entire Chicago area and parts of central and north-western and southern Illinois and Wisconsin, Michigan, on the south side.Meteorologist Jim Allsopp said the storm should be one of the most powerful earthquake in Illinois in more than 70 services years.Weather said winds of 50 miles per hour fell in the Chicago suburb early Tuesday Lombard.
The climate system is a cyclonic weather system in the Great Lakes. cyclonic storms occur on the Great Lakes in a similar manner in the Gulf of Mexico, although the energy is obtained from the jet stream and atmospheric pressure, not the warm ocean currents, according to Bloomberg. The current weather system has central barometric pressure at 28.35 inches. The current system is to compare the storm Nov. 10, 1975 on Lake Superior, which led to the sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald and the loss of the hand 29.
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Chicago Weather
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