From
freezing to triple digits in 10 hours, these states just went on a
wild weather ride
18 April, 2018
Spring is a season known
for its wild temperatures swings, but they usually aren’t this
extreme. In a single day, temperatures climbed 60 to 70 degrees in
parts of Oklahoma and Kansas. One town even went from a near-record
low temperature to breaking the record high. That is nuts.
The weather whiplash was
caused by two strong low pressure systems that moved through the
Central United States nearly back to back. The first caused heavy
snow in the Midwest, tornadoes in the Southeast and torrential rain
in the Northeast. Behind it, winds from the north pushed temperatures
well below average for this time of year.
Right on its heels,
though, the next storm came out of the Rocky Mountains, flipping the
weather from wintry to summery, seemingly overnight.
On Tuesday morning, winds
were a slight breeze out of the northeast. By 1 p.m. they were out of
the south and gusting to 30 mph or more, pumping in hot, dry air from
northern Mexico and Texas. The effect on temperatures was remarkable.
Ever wondered what it would be like to go from (near) freezing to triple digits all in one day? The folks in Alva can tell you all about it.
Low of 33° --> high of 101° (!) in Alva today.
Go home, #okwx. You're drunk. @okmesonet
Alva, in north-central
Oklahoma, started the day at 33 degrees just before sunrise.
Temperature shot up like a rocket after that, eventually capping out
at 101, measured by the Oklahoma Mesonet. That’s a temperature rise
of 68 degrees.
Dodge City, Kan., started
the day below freezing at 28 degrees — four degrees shy of the
record cold temperature for the date (set in 1907). Hot, dry wind
gusts out of the southwest peaked at 45 mph in the early afternoon.
By 4 p.m., Dodge City climbed to 94 degrees and set a record for
hottest temperature on the date. The previous record was 93 degrees
in 2002.
Similar dramatic
temperatures swings happened all over Kansas and Oklahoma on Tuesday.
The hot, dry weather fueled the wildfires burning in the region,
which firefighters were struggling to control. More than 300,000
acres have burned in Oklahoma over the past week from the Rhea Fire
and the 34 Complex.
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