ONLINE
DAILY WEATHER SUMMARY
Wednesday, 5 May 1999
- UPPER AIR
- TEMPERATURE EXTREMES IN THE LOWER 48
- ALASKAN WEATHER
- HAWAIIAN WEATHER
- HISTORICAL WEATHER EVENTS
....
UPPER AIR -- The upper air charts for 00Z Wednesday .
TEMPERATURE EXTREMES ACROSS THE LOWER 48 -- On Tuesday,
the lowest temperature reported in the continental U.S. was XX
degrees at XXX, while Tuesday's high was XX degrees at XXX.
ALASKAN WEATHER -- ...
The lowest overnight temperature in the state on Tuesday was XX
degrees below zero at XXX, while the midafternoon highest temperature
was XX degrees at XXX.
HAWAIIAN WEATHER -- ....
HISTORICAL WEATHER EVENTS - 5 May
From the files of the Aviation Weather Center, Kansas City,
MO and Intellicast
- ...1917...The same storm which a day earlier produced eight
inches of snow in the Texas Panhandle, produced a foot of snow
at Denver, CO, their heaviest snow of record for the month of
May. (David Ludlum)
- ...1930...The temperature at College Park, VA soared from
43 degrees to 93 degrees to begin an exceptional heat wave. (Sandra
and TI Richard Sanders - 1987)
- ...1981...Mobile, AL had its worst flash flooding ever as
thunderstorms unloaded 8 to 16 inches of rain over the metropolitan
area in a couple of hours. Damage was set at 36 million dollars.
(Intellicast)
- ...1986...Sacramento, CA hit the 100 degree mark, breaking
the previous record for this day of 92 degrees which was set in
1944. This is the earliest in the season Sacramento has hit the
100 mark. (Intellicast)
- ...1987...Unseasonably hot weather prevailed in the western
U.S. A dozen cities in California reported record high temperatures
for the date. Afternoon highs of 93 degrees at San Francisco,
98 degrees at San Jose, 100 degrees at Sacramento, and 101 degrees
at Redding, were the warmest of record for so early in the season.
The high of 94 degrees at Medford, OR was also the warmest of
record for so early in the season. (The National Weather Summary)
- ...1988...A stubborn low pressure system continued to drench
the eastern U.S. with rain. Thunderstorms again produced large
hail in North Carolina. (The National Weather Summary)
- ...1989...Thunderstorms swept across Georgia and the Carolinas
during the late afternoon and evening hours spawning seventeen
tornadoes. A tornado at Toccoa, GA injured 15 persons, and a tornado
at Chesnee, SC killed two persons and injured 35 others. Five
tornadoes in North Carolina accounted for five deaths, 88 injuries,
and sixty million dollars damage. Thunderstorms also produced
baseball size hail at Lake Murray, SC, and wind gusts to 78 mph
at Brooklyn, MD. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
- ...1990...A strong Pacific cold front moving rapidly inland
caused weather conditions at the east end of the Strait of Juan
de Fuca in Washington State to quickly change from sunny and calm
to westerly winds of 60 mph and ten-foot waves. Three recreational
fishing boats capsized in heavy seas off Port Angeles resulting
in five deaths. In California, temperatures soared above 90 degrees
across much of the state. The high of 101 degrees in downtown
Los Angeles was eight degrees hotter than their previous record
for the date. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
- ...1995...A supercell thunderstorm rapidly developed just
ahead of a fast moving bow echo squall line and blasted Tarrant
County, Texas. Large hail up to 5 inches in diameter, driven by
80 mph winds, caused a tremendous amount of damage. 10,000 people
were caught out in the open at Mayfest in Downtown Forth Worth,
resulting in 109 injuries from the large hail. Torrential rains
of up to 3 inches in 30 minutes and 5 inches in one hour across
Dallas caused unprecedented flash flooding, resulting in 16 deaths.
Total damage in Forth Worth alone was estimated at 2 billion dollars,
making this the costliest thunderstorm event in U.S. history.
This was the third severe hailstorm to strike the area in only
a little over a month. (Intellicast)
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Prepared by Edward J. Hopkins, Ph.D., email hopkins@meteor.wisc.edu
© Copyright, 1999, The American Meteorological Society.