The last week of July has highlighted at least six odd weather events with the possibility of more to come in the days ahead.

The peculiarities incorporate precipitation extremes, abnormal tropical violent wind connections and out-of-season conditions.

Among them are a few precipitation extremes, weird tropical violent wind connections and out-of-season conditions.

Here’s a glance at what we’ve learned so far and what’s to come.

A rare rain event caused by tropical moisture happened in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania on Sunday evening that had a 0.1 percent chance to occur.

According to NOAA, Harrisburg International Airport got 4.71 crawls of rain in a single hour, from 5:56-6:56 p.m. EDT.

Though July is the driest month of the year in Los Angeles, a hint of rain was recorded in downtown Los Angeles on July 24, which is an uncommon occasion for that log book day and the period of July all in all.

Just three different circumstances in history have any rain been seen there on July 24. A follow was likewise recorded on July 24 of every 1954, 1941 and 1910, the Weather Channel reports.

This week has been vibrant talking about the Fujiwhara effect in the Pacific Ocean which is an unprecedented occasion where two ranges of low pressure interact because of their closeness and after that turn about each other.

Hurricane Noru and now previous Tropical Storm Kulap have effectively done the Fujiwhara move in the western Pacific prior this week.

Presently the Fujiwhara effect is a gauge to happen in the eastern Pacific amongst Irwin and Hilary as the weekend progressed.

Wet days are not a typical event in Seattle amid July since it’s ordinarily the driest month of the year.

The dryness this month, in any case, has an opportunity to enter the record books for Sea-Tac air terminal. No rain has been seen there through July 25, and none is in the forecast through Monday, July 31.

The weather in New England on Monday evening took after something you may envision happening in fall or spring.

At 1 p.m. EDT, Boston was only 58 degrees with light rain and winds blasting to 26 mph. That temperature was just four degrees hotter than the day by day record low for July 24 which is 54 degrees.

The South will have a late-July regard this end of the week as a chilly front range away from the average summer humidity that is presently set up.

Chilly front entries are a genuinely uncommon event in the South amid mid-summer. That is on the grounds that the fly stream is normally contained close to the Canadian fringe and once in a while takes the sharp jump southward that is required for a frosty front to enter into the southern states.

Dew focuses in the 70s are ordinary in the Southeast amid July, which implies the air is brimming with dampness and extremely moist. This end of the week, dew focuses in parts of the Southeast will drop into the 60s, giving a wonderful change.