363 FXAK69 PAFG 072300 AFDAFGNorthern Alaska Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Fairbanks AK 300 PM AKDT Sun Sep 7 2025
.SYNOPSIS... A low pressure system along the West Coast lifts northeast toward the Beaufort Sea tonight with a trailing frontal boundary stalling across the Western Interior through Monday. Light rain is spread across most of Northwestern Alaska where temperatures are in the 40s to around 50F. Temperatures are 5-15F warmer under partly to mostly sunny skies across the east-central interior. Rain chances struggle to shift eastward this evening through Monday night, but hit or miss showers seem most likely at this time. For higher elevations of the Brooks Range, rain should mix with snow but accumulations stay light. Scattered rain showers linger across the west-central interior on Tuesday ahead of a much deeper low pressure tracking into the northern Gulf of Alaska. This low pressure tracks to near Kodiak Island on Wednesday resulting in frontogenesis and increasing precipitation chances along the remnant frontal boundary through the end of the week. Accumulating snowfall is increasingly likely for the Brooks Range and North Slope by late Wednesday through Thursday night with isolated rain chances continuing across the eastern interior.
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.KEY WEATHER MESSAGES... Central and Eastern Interior...
- Southerly wind gusts up to 55 mph through the Alaska Range Passes are expected through this evening.
- Scattered showers continue across the northwest interior near Bettles with around 0.25" to 0.5" of rainfall through Tuesday.
- More isolated rain showers are expected across the eastern interior where amounts are generally less than 0.1".
- Steady rain chances increase for the northern interior Wednesday through Wednesday night with isolated to scattered rain showers across the remainder of the interior through the end of the week.
West Coast and Western Interior...
- Light rain diminishes along the West Coast with light rain continuing across the Western Interior through Monday
- Cooler and drier for the West Coast on Monday and spreading into the western interior on Tuesday with northerly winds increasing along the West Coast late Tuesday through Wednesday.
North Slope and Brooks Range...
- Light rain continues across all but the far western North Slope with rain totals between 0.33" and 0.66", greatest between Deadhorse and Anaktuvuk Pass.
- Higher elevations of the Brooks Range will see up to 1.0" of additional precipitation through Tuesday with light snow accumulations possible.
- Accumulating wet snow combined with blustery northeast winds are increasingly likely across most of the North Slope Wednesday night into Thursday. Snow chances diminish Thursday night into Friday.
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.FORECAST ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION... A decaying upper level low pressure causes the elongated low pressure along the West Coast to gradually weaken as it lifts northeast toward the Beaufort Sea tonight into Monday. Additionally, the system`s moisture plume is being intercepted by the Alaska Range so rainfall rates are expected to gradually diminish. Southerly winds through the Alaska Range passes continue to be gusty, but are generally staying near or below advisory criteria and are still forecast to diminish tonight. The primary feature of interest is a frontal trough that stalls and weakens across the West Central interior through Tuesday. However, as a seasonably strong ~980 mb surface low lifts northeast into the Gulf of Alaska frontogenesis increases along the remnant front. Diurnally-induced convective showers may develop along and east of the boundary on Tuesday, particularly at higher elevations. The Gulf of Alaska low sends a warm front inland on Wednesday with frontogenesis and rain chances increasing rapidly, primarily increasing on the cool side of the front. The precipitation shield gradually shifts north-northwest through Thursday with primarily snow on the North Side of the Brooks Range by late Wednesday.
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.FIRE WEATHER... Conditions stay generally status quo for the Upper Tanana Valley with generally southerly Chinook flow prevailing though increasing clouds and rain chances should allow for a gradual cooling trend late this week. Spotty rain showers return to the east-central Interior this evening then spread across the eastern interior on Monday into Tuesday. Wetting rains are not expected with these showers. Delta Junction will see gusts to around 35 mph this afternoon and evening before winds weaken and become more localized within the passes. Thunder chances may return to the eastern interior near the Canadian border Thursday and Friday afternoons.
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.HYDROLOGY... Wet weather continues spreading northeast across most of Northwestern Alaska today and tonight. Additional accumulation of 0.25 to 0.75 inches are forecast with locally over 1" at higher elevations, particularly across the west-central Brooks Range. Water levels in mainstem rivers remain elevated after last week`s high water event, but forecast rainfall is expected to limit how quickly water levels drop. A flood watch remains in effect for the Kobuk River with a Flood Advisory remaining in effect for Kobuk.
For the most up to date forecasts and flood products, visit: weather.gov/afg and weather.gov/aprfc
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.EXTENDED FORECAST DAYS 4-7... A weakening ~988 mb low near Kodiak Island weakens across the northern Gulf of Alaska through Saturday. Waves of energy track north along and ahead of a remnant frontal boundary oriented roughly north-south between Bettles and McGrath. Rain chances across the eastern interior will be more showery and thunder chances can`t be ruled out near the Canadian border Thursday and Friday afternoons. Increasing rain chances and cloud cover result in a gradual cooling trend through the end of the week.
More active weather is expected across the North Slope as a lobe of the Arctic low phases with the strong low near Kodiak Island Wednesday into Wednesday night. As a result, a closed low develops in the vicinity of Kotzebue with a wave of moderate snow developing near the eastern Brooks Range late on Wednesday and spreading northwest across most of the North Slope through Thursday. Several inches of wet snowfall are possible, particularly for areas that receive moderate snowfall rates overnight. This may include portions of the Dalton Highway. Even though snow may transition back to rain on Friday, below normal temperatures are expected for much of northwestern Alaska through Thursday, which may shift further east late this week.
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Coastal Hazard Potential Days 3 and 4...None
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.AFG WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... AK...Wind Advisory for AKZ849. Flood Watch for AKZ813-819. PK...Small Craft Advisory for PKZ850. &&
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NWS AFG Office Area Forecast Discussion