It is probable that the weather pattern will flip during the next week in central parts of the United States with more rounds of showers and thunderstorms comforting the heat. But these downpours can be severe with the threat of damaging wind gusts and thus, flood like situation.
However, on the flip side, throughout the next week, as the strong sunshine hits the landscape and parches the ground, temperatures will tend to rise up over much of the Central states.
Late next week, temperatures could conflict the highest levels of the summer so far, including Chicago, Iowa, and Omaha, Nebraska, Des Moines. Highs in many areas of the Plains and the Upper Midwest will vary from the middle to upper 80-90°F, and in some places might top the century mark.
Farther south, no substantial relief from the heat is predicted for the South Central states the following week. In fact, as humidity levels drop slightly, temperatures will trend upward and can reach extreme levels in some locations.
In some cities, rains will ease peculiarly dry conditions and may stop the pattern of building drought in other areas.
It is likely that as the ground trends wetter in more and more areas, temperatures might scuffle to surpass average from southern New England to the mid-Atlantic. Also, high temperatures will normally be in the lower to middle between 80-90°F, in towns such as Atlanta and Charlotte, North Carolina. And, it is possible that where storms occur early and on a frequent basis during a particular day, maximum temperatures in a few locations in the Southeast may reach up to 70-80°F.
Image Credit: country-facts.findthedata.com
Source: accuweather.com