Weather


Jacksonville, Illinois

National Weather Service: Flood Warning

Current Conditions

 
Temp: 56°
Dew Point: 45°
Humidity: 67%
Wind: Calm
Visibility: 10.0 miles
Pressure: 30.08 in. 0
Sky: Clear

 

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Almanac

Average High: 47°

Average Low: 31°

Record high/year: 72° (1931)

Record low/year: 0° (1950)

Sunrise: 6:54 AM

Sunset: 4:39 PM

Detailed History

Sun and Moon

Sunrise: 06:54 AM (CST)

Moon Rise: 11:57 AM (CST)

Sunset: 04:39 PM (CST)

Moon Set: 10:54 PM (CST)

Moon Phase

Today
Nov. 24
Dec. 02
Dec. 08
Dec. 16

 

Local Radar

Local Satellite


Air Pollution

Air Pollution Forecast for Springfield

Current Air Quality: Moderate Pollutant: PM2.5
Current Air Quality: Good Pollutant: OZONE
Mon Air Quality: Moderate Pollutant: PM2.5

Next 12 Hours

 
11  am
2  pm
5  pm
8  pm
-1  am
Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy
Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy
Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy
Partly Cloudy Partly Cloudy
Mostly Cloudy Mostly Cloudy
56°
58°
54°
50°
49°

 

Forecast data from the National Digital Forecast Database


5-Day Forecast

Monday Partly Cloudy Hi 59° Lo 43° Partly Cloudy
Tuesday Rain Hi 54° Lo 38° Rain
Wednesday Chance of Snow Hi 45° Lo 32° Chance of Snow
Thursday Chance of Snow Hi 40° Lo 29° Chance of Snow
Friday Partly Cloudy Hi 45° Lo 31° Partly Cloudy

 

Forecast for Morgan

Updated: 6:28 am CST on November 23, 2009

Today

Partly sunny. Highs around 60. South winds 5 to 10 mph.

 

Tonight

Mostly cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s. Southeast winds 5 to 10 mph.

 

Tuesday

Chance of rain in the morning...then rain likely in the afternoon. Highs in the mid 50s. South winds 10 to 15 mph with gusts to around 25 mph. Chance of precipitation 60 percent.

 

Tuesday Night

Cloudy. Chance of rain in the evening. Lows around 40. Southwest winds around 15 mph. Chance of precipitation 50 percent.

 

Wednesday

Mostly cloudy. Highs in the mid 40s. West winds around 15 mph.

 

Wednesday Night

Mostly cloudy. Lows in the lower 30s.

 

Thanksgiving Day

Mostly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of rain or snow. Highs in the lower 40s.

 

Thursday Night

Mostly cloudy. Lows in the lower 30s.

 

Friday and Friday Night

Partly cloudy. Highs in the mid 40s. Lows in the lower 30s.

 

Saturday through Sunday

Partly cloudy. Highs in the upper 40s. Lows in the lower 30s.

 

 

 Flood Warning  Statement as of 10:34 am CST on November 23, 2009


The Flood Warning continues for
the Illinois River at Meredosia.
* At 9 am Monday the stage was 437.5 feet.
* Flood stage is 432.0 feet.
* Moderate flooding is occurring and moderate flooding is forecast.
* Forecast... the river is forecast to continue slowly falling to near
436 feet by Sunday morning.
* Impact... at 436.0 feet... the city of Meredosia plugs storm sewer
outlets.
* Impact... at 435.4 feet... the Meredosia boat dock floods.




1006 am CST Mon Nov 23 2009

The Flood Warning continues for
the Illinois River at Beardstown.
* Until further notice... or until the warning is cancelled.
* At 945 am Monday the stage was 20.2 feet.
* Flood stage is 14 feet.
* Moderate flooding is occurring and moderate flooding is forecast.
* Forecast... the river will continue to fall to a stage of 20.1 feet
by Tuesday morning.


                  Fld observed forecast 6 am
location stg stg day time Tue Wed Thu

Illinois River
Beardstown 14 20.2 Mon 10 am 20.1 19.9 19.7






Personal Weather Stations

Personal Weather Stations [Add your weather station!]

Location: Park Street, Jacksonville, IL

Updated: 11:06 AM CST

Temperature: 56.3 °F Dew Point: 47 °F Humidity: 71% Wind: Calm Pressure: 30.07 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Historical Graphs

Location: HADS ILLINOIS RIVER AT FLORENCE IL US USARMY-COE, Milton, IL

Updated: 9:00 AM CST

Temperature:  °F Dew Point: - Humidity: - Wind: Calm Pressure: - Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Historical Graphs

Location: HADS ILLINOIS RIVER AT VALLEY CITY IL US USARMY-COE, Griggsville, IL

Updated: 10:00 AM CST

Temperature: 52 °F Dew Point: - Humidity: - Wind: Calm Pressure: - Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Historical Graphs

Location: HADS ILLINOIS RIVER AT BEARDSTOWN IL US USARMY-COE, Beardstown, IL

Updated: 9:45 AM CST

Temperature:  °F Dew Point: - Humidity: - Wind: Calm Pressure: - Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Historical Graphs

Location: Jacksonville St., White Hall, IL

Updated: 11:06 AM CST

Temperature: 56.9 °F Dew Point: 45 °F Humidity: 65% Wind: ESE at 2.0 mph Pressure: 30.03 in Hourly Precipitation: 0.00 in Historical Graphs

MSN Maps of:

Temperature Dew Point Humidity Wind Pressure Hourly Precipitation -

NWS Forecaster Discussion




614 
fxus63 kilx 231644 
afdilx 


Area forecast discussion 
National Weather Service Lincoln Illinois 
1044 am CST Monday Nov 23 2009 


Discussion... 
issued 1044 am CST Monday Nov 23 2009 


Will update the forecast to remove morning dense fog NE of I-74 
where low clouds will decrease. Partly to mostly sunny skies over 
central Illinois today while clouds increase over southeast Illinois. Mild highs in 
the upper 50s to around 60f with light winds so another nice day. 


16z/10 am surface map shows strong 1038 mb high pressure over 
Nova Scotia Canada and ridging westward into the Great Lakes and 
eastern states. 1009 mb low pressure was over the OK Panhandle 
with a frontal boundary into central Nebraska and southeast South Dakota and 
northern Minnesota. A weak warm front was over southern Indiana into 
central Illinois from Quincy to Mattoon. Aloft upper level ridges were 
along the West Coast and off the East Coast while upper level trough 
was over the High Plains and a weaker trough into Illinois and lower Ohio 
Valley. Low clouds linger NE of I-74 and some fog still lingered 
with Rantoul and Pontiac at a half mile and Danville and Lacon 
between 1 and 2 miles. Low and middle clouds spreading slowly 
northward across southern Illinois toward southeast Illinois. Temperatures ranged from the 
middle 40s from I-74 NE to the lower to middle 50s from Lincoln and 
Mattoon SW. 


Fog and low clouds should decrease NE of I-74 through the lunch 
hour with skies becoming partly to mostly sunny over central Illinois. 
Short range models show a weak short wave/trough over central Illinois at 
noon/18z and dampening out as it lifts NE out of Illinois during this 
afternoon. Models develop a strong cutoff low over the Central 
Plains this evening with upper level ridging over the Ohio Valley 
which should keep central/eastern Illinois dry through tonight. Weak south-southeast 
flow will increase low/middle clouds across southeast Illinois today and into central 
Illinois during tonight. Highs in the upper 50s to around 60f on track 
and a good 10 degree above normal highs of 45 to 50f for late Nov. 


Huettl 


&& 


Aviation... 
issued 515 am CST Monday Nov 23 2009 


Two areas of concern this forecast period. The first being with 
the patchy areas of fog this morning...with the second challenge 
being with the MVFR ceilings tracking northward out of southeast MO and western 
Kentucky this morning. Light wind flow coupled with abundant low level 
moisture from wet ground has led to some patchy MVFR/IFR fog...especially 
across the east. Will carry tempo groups for the fog through at least 15z 
and that may not be long enough as the extensive middle and high 
level cloud cover may limit the amount of mixing this morning and keep 
the lower visibilities in for a bit longer compared with the past few 
mrngs. 


Once the fog dissipates late this morning into early this afternoon...will 
see a brief period of VFR conditions before our attention turns to 
the MVFR and local IFR ceilings to our south for this evening and 
overnight. Based on the present movement of the lower ceilings to our 
south...it appears they should begin to affect spi and Dec early 
this evening...shortly aftr 00z...and points further north an hour 
or two later. Seeing a lot of ceilings at or below 1000 feet across Arkansas and 
SW Kentucky early this morning with the low level flow expctd to bring that 
northward during the day. May even see some patchy drizzle move in overnight 
as models do indicate some weak lift pushing across the area during 
the early morning hours...which may actually bring ceilings and visibilities 
down further than currently indicated. Will continue to monitor for 
those trends during the day. 


Smith 


&& 


Previous discussion... 
issued 217 am CST Monday Nov 23 2009 


High pressure ridging still extending west across Illinois early 
this morning...but its effects are lessening with time. Regional 
radar mosaics showing some echoes in far west central 
Illinois...but surface observation are showing the clouds in this area 
mainly at the 10000 foot level or higher...and laps soundings in 
this area are fairly dry...so little precipitation is actually 
reaching the ground. 


The effects of a developing storm system in the Tuesday-Wednesday 
time frame remain the primary forecast concern...along with any 
lingering precipitation issues for Thanksgiving day. 


Short term...today through Thanksgiving day... 


Shortwave of interest is currently digging across The Rockies per 
latest water vapor imagery. Most of the short-range models are 
fairly uniform in the evolution of an associated surface cyclone 
over the Central Plains...lifting it northeast to southern 
Wisconsin by Wednesday morning. The NAM model is the exception... 
with a slower and more southern track into central Illinois...so 
this solution will be discounted at this time. Timing of the 
frontal passage has not changed much from the last forecast 
package...likely to be Tuesday evening. Likely probability of precipitation will spread 
from west to east across the County Warning Area on Tuesday...holding off across 
the east until afternoon. Will linger healthy probability of precipitation into the 
evening...then taper them off after midnight as the dry slot works 
its way across the area. 


A separate shortwave will quickly dive south out of Manitoba 
Wednesday morning...becoming the dominant closed upper low as the 
original low shears out as it lifts northeast. All models have 
this feature across northern Illinois by Thursday morning. 
Lingering light rain is expected on Wednesday primarily over the 
northern County Warning Area...in the circulation of the departing surface low. 
However...another trough/cold front will quickly approach from the 
northwest late Wednesday night...and swing through the area on 
Thanksgiving day. Thickness levels in the 1000-500mb layer plunge 
low enough to support a transition to snow Wednesday night...with 
BUFKIT soundings also showing this trend. Precipitation likely to 
continue into Thursday as either rain or snow...although the longer 
range models are a bit divided on the speed of this front...thus 
have differing opinions on the amount of precipitation involved. 
Currently will go with 30 probability of precipitation for this period and let the later 
model runs try to resolve this issue. 


Long term...Friday through Sunday... 


GFS and European model (ecmwf) both agree on a surface ridge pushing east across 
the central Continental U.S. On Friday...with the upper level flow becoming 
more southwesterly by Sunday morning as a pair of shortwaves move 
through the plains and southern Rocky Mountains. Any associated 
precipitation would likely hold off until at least Sunday...but 
the timing is a bit in question with differing solutions on the 
speed of the surface front. 


Geelhart 


&& 


Ilx watches/warnings/advisories... 
none. 


&& 


$$ 














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