A significant winter storm is still in the cards for Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, and Indiana. If you have plans to travel, you should read this and then reconsider your plans.
Dry air is currently infiltrating the central United States following a passing cold front. Dew points have dropped below zero, hinting at the arctic origins of the air.
It will take a small amount of time to saturate the atmospheric column, but it should not take long for precipitation to reach the ground as snow.
TIMING:
- Missouri: Snow will start to enter southeast Missouri from the southwest Saturday morning.
- Illinois: Snow will enter Illinois late Saturday morning/early afternoon.
- Kentucky: Snow will enter the extreme southwest corner of Kentucky Saturday mid-morning.
- Indiana: Snow will enter the southwest corner of the state Saturday afternoon. It should enter central Indiana late Saturday afternoon.
HOW MUCH:
Computer models have been extremely consistent on how much water will be available in the atmosphere. There is one computer model that has been consistent with lower water amounts - the GFS.
All that being said, there is copious amounts of water available and there will also be cold air in place. Snow to Liquid ratios will be higher than normal due to the cold. Normally, we look at 10 to 1. For this storm, the ratio could range from 12 to 1 to as much as 18 to 1.
After looking over the Friday morning computer model runs (and the last several days worth of data) these are the numbers I think could fall as snow through Sunday night.
INDIANA
- Bloomington: 8"-12"
- Columbus: 10"-14"
- Indianapolis: 7"-10"
- Shelbyville: 8"-11"
MISSOURI
- Cape Girardeau: 8"-11"
- St. Louis: 7"-11"
ILLINOIS
- Carbondale: 10"-15"
KENTUCKY
- Paducah: 7"-12"
These numbers could still fluctuate as more data comes in over the next 24 hours. If there is any sleet mixed in, especially in western Kentucky and the Missouri bootheel, it could have significant impact to snowfall amounts.
The attached map may not exactly match what I have forecast above. It is a display of a blend of computer model snowfall through 7am ET Monday.

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