Home » News » Title: Hottest spring on record for Australia’s east coast as dangerous weekend storms return

Title: Hottest spring on record for Australia’s east coast as dangerous weekend storms return

by Emma Walker – News Editor

severe Storms Threaten⁢ East Coast as‍ Australia experiences Stark Temperature Divide

SYDNEY – A broad area ⁤stretching from north ⁤Queensland to New South Wales faces a risk of severe thunderstorms‍ this ⁤Saturday, ‌with potential warnings for damaging winds, large hail, and heavy rainfall. Meanwhile,⁢ a dramatic temperature contrast‌ is unfolding across​ the country, with ‌the east coast experiencing record-breaking​ warmth ‌while⁣ southern regions brace for snow on the frist day ⁢of summer.

According to the ABC News, the primary threat​ from Saturday’s storms will be heavy, slow-moving rainfall in the tropics,‌ coupled ​with damaging winds in​ the south ⁢driven by a strong westerly jet stream. South-east Queensland, including Brisbane, could also experience heavy falls and isolated pockets of hail during Saturday afternoon. Gusty⁢ storms​ are also anticipated over south-east NSW due to a separate weather system.

A‌ drier‌ air mass is expected to⁣ move⁤ through NSW and southern Queensland on Sunday, ‌tho ⁢humid and stormy conditions will persist in‍ the tropics.

The unusual ‍weather pattern is linked to a significant shift in wind patterns ‌this‍ spring, stemming from rapid ‍warming ⁢over the South Pole in September. This warming weakened the polar vortex,causing the belt of westerly winds ⁢around Antarctica to expand northward.

“Compared to normal, there has been a deviation‍ to westerly winds this spring,” the article explains. For east coast cities, these westerlies bring warm breezes in spring. However, for southern coastlines, they deliver cool air from the⁤ Southern Ocean. This contrast is expected to ​be ⁤notably ‍pronounced in ⁣the coming days,⁢ with Adelaide’s temperatures perhaps‌ 10°C lower than ‍Sydney’s at similar⁣ latitudes.

Embedded within these westerlies are a series of cold fronts and ‌waves of polar air tracking unusually far north for this ⁢time of ⁤year. Snow is forecast to begin falling on the highest peaks of Tasmania and the mainland on Sunday, intensifying with the arrival of colder ‍air on‍ Monday​ – the official start of summer. Current‌ modelling suggests⁤ snow levels could reach as low as 1,300 metres in⁢ the mainland alps and 1,000 ‌metres in Tasmania on Monday.

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