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Remnants from tropical depression Fred are expected to hit Southwestern Pennsylvania today and Fayette, Greene and Washington counties may see as many as two inches of rainfall before noon. ....
Get those air conditioners ready. A warmup is expected to kick in with temperatures in the low-80s by Wednesday and the mid- to upper-80s by Friday. Seemingly gone for good are the below normal temperatures that brought frost potential earlier this month. “We’re coming off a period of cold weather due to upper troughing. Now, we’re moving into a period of warm weather because of upper ridging,” said meteorologist Pat Herald at the National Weather Service in Moon. For those not familiar with the terminology, a trough is an elongated area of relatively low pressure that brings colder temperatures. A ridge is an elongated area of high pressure. Air in a high pressure area compresses and warms as it descends, which means warm and dry weather for the area in the immediate future. ....
The tail end of April has been both lion and lamb in terms of weather. A little less than a week ago, Southwestern Pennsylvania recorded more than an inch of snowfall and a low temperature of a balmy 32 degrees. About 1.6 inches fell, according to the National Weather Service, bringing the month’s total to about 2.4 inches. The average snowfall for April is about 1.5 inches, and the snowiest April on record was in 1901 when 13.5 inches fell, with nearly all of it coming in one day. Wednesday didn’t break any low-temperature records – the record April 21 low was 22 degrees in 1875 – and Tuesday won’t see any new highs despite temperatures jumping into the 80s. ....
TribLIVE s Daily and Weekly email newsletters deliver the news you want and information you need, right to your inbox. People who live or work in the Mon Valley may notice air pollution is worse than normal on Wednesday. It’s being caused by high pressure building in the area that will create inversion conditions Wednesday evening, National Weather Service meteorologist Pat Herald said. Temperature inversions are when warm air traps cold air and pollutants close to the surface, often causing bad smells like sulfur or rotten eggs in the air. The problem was noticed Tuesday evening, when the Liberty air quality monitor began registering elevated pollution readings that continued Wednesday, according to the Allegheny County Health Department. ....
WHEELING Depending on one’s attitudes toward driving, the cold, and sledding, locals may have mixed feelings about the snow. One thing everyone can agree ....