1. As the sun heats the damp ground, rising currents of moistening air will induce towering cumulus clouds to form, some of which will produce strong thunderstorms. 2. As the sun heats the ground, rising currents of humid air will give rise to towering clouds across the region, some of which will spawn severe thunderstorms. 3. As the intense rays of the June sun heat the interior, rising currents develop, resulting in a lowering of the surface air pressure. 4. As the sun heats the ground, rising currents of air will generate puffy cumulus clouds across the region. 5. As the sun warms the land, rising currents of air will generate puffy cumulus clouds, especially near the mountains of New England. 6. As the sun heats the ground, rising currents of moist air will produce puffy cumulus clouds over interior New England and upstate New York. 7. As the potent July sun heats the complex terrain, rising currents of moistened air will lead to towering clouds and spotty thunderstorms in the mountains. 8. After the rising current that created them are gone, clouds sometimes just float along when low-level winds are light. 9. Heavy precipitation is not a direct result of low pressure, but rather the by-product of vigorously rising currents of air. 10. Heavy precipitation is not a direct result of low pressure, rather it is the by-product of vigorously rising currents of air. |