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Iowa thunderstorm line

BBauer

EF2
Joined
Feb 21, 2010
Messages
141
Location
West Des Moines, IA
Would the line of thunderstorms streaking across Iowa and down into MO and Kansas right now be considered a squall line? If not what would they be called. Its like they are playing follow the leader, like a big train of thunderstorms all connected together in one strip but moving in a single file line more or less
 
BBauer...Welcolm to the forum! Yes, to answer your question, I would say what you are looking at is indeed a squall line. Squall lines are a line of thunderstorms along a frontal boundary. Primary threats are strong gust front winds, hail, lightning (of course!), and bow echos. However, you can get embedded supercells, and even tornadoes with these events.
 
I guess I thought the definition of a squall line was a moving wall of thunderstorms, like football players spread across the turf and moving down field, like a moving front. In this storm the cells (although along the warm front) are marching down a narrow corridor, in other words stacked deep but not wide if that makes sense. I'll try to use the education links to answer most of my basic questions but I thought the phenomenon on radar was interesting and wanted to figure out what to call it. I'm learning a lot on here, thanks!
 
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