More severe storms are expected to form on Monday along a cold front to the west and a dryline extending from the Great Lakes in the the central and southern Plains.
The National Weather Service/Storm Prediction Center is indicating that the most intense storms will occur in an area stretching from the Missouri, Iowa, Nebraska borders, down to Wichita, Kansas.
Storms in that level 4 of 5 sector will be capable of insanely large hail, damaging winds, and intense tornadoes.
Severe weather threats start to diminish the further east one goes. Southeast Iowa and northeast Missouri will have storms still capable of an isolated tornado.
Most of the destructive hail will be to the west of the Kansas City metro area in the pink shaded region.
The highest probable severe weather threat for the Tri-State area is expected to be damaging winds. Storms from the west are expected to form a line segment as the move to the east.
The National Weather Service is expecting most of the storms to develop in the evening. Some lingering thunderstorms are expected to linger in the Tri-State area throughout Monday morning and that could change the dynamics of the usable warm sector for further storm development…