100 points Use the U.S. Weather Maps provided. Label the maps using the appropriate weather symbols. 1. Draw locations of fronts using the symbols you learned in this module. 2. Use H and L and isobar lines to show high-and low-pressure areas of air. 3. Use green to show areas of precipitation. 4. Use red to show warm air masses and blue to show cold air masses. Create the first map for July 4, 2006. Plot the temperature conditions. There are extremely hot temperatures across the United States. It is at least 90 degrees in all parts of the southeast from Virginia to Florida all the way to Texas. Nevada and Arizona are also in the 90s. The rest of the country, including California, is in the 80s with a few locations in northern Maine in the 70s. Plot the air masses and fronts reported for July 4, 2006: A warm front is moving out of the northeast around Massachusetts. A cold air mass that stretches from Michigan through Kansas and into Texas is moving east. These air masses are producing an occluded front in Canada. Plot the air masses and fronts reported for July 4, 2006: Behind the cold air mass are lower temperatures and a region of high pressure through North Dakota, South Dakota, and Montana down to Colorado. Near Washington state is a region of low pressure, and behind it, a cold air front. Plot the precipitation reported for July 4, 2006: Rain is moving along the lines of the cold front. More rain is behind the region of high pressure, moving east out of California.
