46 F. high temperature in St. Cloud Tuesday.
62 F. average high on April 26.
62 F. high on April 26, 2015.
April 27, 2002:
Heavy snow falls over the Twin Cities and central Minnesota. Chanhassen
receives 6 inches, and vivid lightning is seen with the snow during the
evening.
April 27, 1996: Embarrass records a low of 9 degrees. Some central, and most northern, Minnesota lakes are still ice-covered.
April 27, 1921: A late season blizzard hits Hibbing. The temperature was 75 degrees three days earlier.
Tornado Lotto: When To Pay Extra-Close AttentionXenia.
Greensburg. Joplin. Tuscaloosa. Fridley. All towns leveled by large,
violent tornadoes. Every spring an unholy meteorological lotto plays out
on the Plains. Most of us are spared, but a few cities are decimated.
The
next 4-8 weeks are, historically, most violent. Why? The ground is
warming rapidly, yet the upper atmosphere is suffering from a wintry
hangover. Extreme instability, along with Gulf moisture and wind shear
create a ripe environment for "supercell" storms.
Things to watch
for: large hail is often a precursor. A PDS (particularly dangerous
situation) tornado watch is a clue you're not dealing with
garden-variety storms. A "Tornado Emergency" is one step above a tornado
warning, implying a confirmed tornado on the ground. In spite of high
tech there's still no substitute for common sense.
Don't complain
about a chilly week. The storm that spawned big tornadoes yesterday
tracks to our south, keeping us on the stable (safe) northern edge of
the system. Up to 1 inch of rain falls
tonight into
Thursday; even more over far southern Minnesota.
Enjoy the cool front; 80F is possible the first weekend of May!
Heaviest Rains Pass South.
The same system that sparked severe weather across the central and
southern Plains Tuesday will push a shield of moderate to heavy rain
into the Midwest with as much as 2-3" of rain near Sioux Falls. 00z NAM
guidance prints out .54" of rain for MSP; amounts drop off rapidly as
you head north of the Twin Cities. 60-hour 4KM NAM guidance: NOAA and
AerisWeather.
Too Cool for Tornadoes.
My lame attempt at spinning a cool, damp, showery pattern into
Saturday. 60s return early next week; 70s by the end of next week. Yes,
spring returns in all its glory within 3-5 days. Source:
WeatherSpark.
Warming Trend into mid-May.
500 mb guidance looking out 2 weeks (GFS) forecasts an expanding ridge
of high pressure from the Plains into central Canada, suggesting warmer
than average weather for the second week of May, while New England stays
unusually chilly with more rain (and snow) showers.
Sweatshirts and Shorts.
Proving once again that spring is the most fickle of seasons, light
jackets give way to shorts and T-shirts within a week or so; a shot at
80F during the first weekend of May. GFS forecast for MSP courtesy of
NOAA.
1 Minute Visible Updates.
Talk about hypnotic - here is a loop from NOAA's new GOES-14 (GOES-R)
satellite, where images are snapped once every 60 seconds, creating a
smooth, fluid satellite loop that captures features unseen until now.
This animation was recorded around 5 PM yesterday as tornadic T-storms
were firing up along a dry line in western Texas and Oklahoma. Credit:
RAMMB, Colorado State.
Storm Chasers Look Back on Deadly (Tuscaloosa) Tornado. A monstrous EF-4 struck Tuscaloosa 5 years ago today; here's an excerpt of a perspective from local storm chasers at
al.com: "...
Five
years later, Chandler would do it again. Not for the adrenaline,
although he felt it. Ill-advised as it was, the chase changed his life.
And not because the "F5 Tuscaloosa tornado"
video Hughett filmed and Chandler posted went viral, currently boasting
3.4 million views on YouTube. The chase gave Chandler a new purpose in
life, not as a budding storm-chaser, but as public servant. The
Tuscaloosa native now works as a firefighter in Tennessee, a career he'd
soon pursue in the immediate aftermath of what happened in the
afternoon of April 27, 2011. Now a historic document, the video marks a
crucial moment the city's history, chronicling 13 of the most dire and
challenging minutes in one of Tuscaloosa's darkest and subsequently
proudest hours..."
* The raw tornado chaser video is
here (rated PG for salty language). No wonder it has 3.5 million views on YouTube - it's amazing.
A Tornado's Heading Your Way. Now What?
Are there ever circumstances where tryinig to drive away from a tornado
makes sense? It's a tough question, but if it's an EF-4 or EF-5 and you
don't have a basement, the tornado may not be survivable. Here's an
excerpt from
CNN: "...
My
advice would be to seek the safest place available. That is: lie in a
ditch or ... (get) behind a heavy object if you had a tractor or even a
tree." He cited the 1979 Wichita Falls, Texas, tornado as a cautionary
lesson. That twister killed 54 people and, Kiesling noted, "many people
were killed in automobiles because they tried to outrun it." Still,
Kiesling allowed, there may be times when fleeing an impending tornado
might be a good option. "If you have good information on the storm, if
you have plenty of warning, if you have an automobile, it may make
sense, but I personally don't feel that's the advice that we want to
give the public..."
Two Reasons Why We Have To Stop Throwing Around the Phrase "Wedge Tornado". I couldn't agree more. Here's a snippet from
Capital Weather Gang: "...
While width is not a measure of strength (I’ve seen an EF-1 wedge
tornado in Kansas), it is true that the widest tornadoes tend to be
strong. From 0.25 miles up to one mile wide, we find 69 percent of 0.25
mile wide tornadoes were rated F/EF-2 (strong) or greater and 87 percent
made that classification at 1 mile wide. Given their scare appeal, it
is understandable that wedge tornadoes are feared and widely reported.
Additionally, many of the great tornado disasters of our time — think
Joplin (2011) or Greensburg (2007) — have been caused by wedge
tornadoes..."
Map credit: SPC, Ian Livingston, Capital Weather Gang.
Tornado Warnings Get Minds Spinning.
Can longer warnings (up to an hour) trigger behavior more likely to get
people injured and killed? Quite possibly. Here's an excerpt from
The Denver Post: "...
For
all of their advances in the physical sciences, forecasters have yet to
determine when advance warnings are most effective and how urgent their
messages should be. They worry about the "cry wolf" syndrome, in which
people may tune them out, and about people overreacting, especially with
tornadoes. People have left much safer buildings and headed into their
cars to flee, but cars are the last place you want to be in a tornado.
And it's not just tornadoes. Forecasters are still trying to understand
why several people in Houston ignored the mantra "Turn around, don't
drown" and died after driving onto flooded streets last week..."
Houston Flood Control Efforts Fall Behind Urban Sprawl.
Not only is the rain falling harder (as a general rule) but
urbanization and sprawl has limited the ability of rainwater to soak
into the soil - now it often has no choice but to run off into streets
and storm sewers. Here's an excerpt from Yahoo News: "Flood
control has long been a challenging issue in Houston, dating back to
the city's infancy on the banks of the Buffalo Bayou when its first
flood was recorded more than 170 years ago. Major reservoirs built in
the 1940s helped alleviate some of problems, but a population explosion
and urban sprawl since then enveloped the reservoirs. Experts said the
city's efforts since then have fallen woefully short of the massive
needs. And there is climate change, which has increased the frequency of
large rainfalls, climatologists said. The result this week was that
sudden downpours overwhelmed infrastructure and inundated whole sections
of the city, leaving at least seven people dead..."
Why Modern Meteorologists Use a 19th Century Crystal Ball. I did not know this - here's an excerpt of interesting triva at
Atlas Obscura: "
It
sounds like the premise for a riddle: At the South Pole are two crystal
balls that provides unfailingly accurate information—not about the
future, but about the past. This is no trick. It's just meteorology. The
dual glass spheres at the South Pole are Campbell-Stokes sunshine
recorders, orbs that capture the number of hours of direct sunlight each
day, as well as its intensity..."
Photo credit above: "
A Campbell-Stokes sunshine recorder in Antarctica". (Photo: Akulovz/CC BY-SA 4.0).
U.S. Wind Power Jobs Hit Record High, Up 20% in 2016. Clean Technica has an update - here's the intro to a recent story: "The
US wind power industry reached a record job high of 88,000 jobs at the
start of 2016, up 20% in the space of a year. According to a new report
from the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA), the American wind
power industry supported a record 88,000 jobs at the start of 2016, an
increase of 20% over 2015. The report, US Wind Industry Annual Market
Report, Year Ending 2015, heralded the strong job growth in the sector
with the recent news that wind topped new energy capacity in the US in 2015..."
Forget Too Much TV. It's Too Big TV We Should Worry About.
Wave goodbye to the traditional 30 and 60 minute TV "show". Streaming
TV changes everything, including expectations. Here's a clip at The New York Times: "...Today’s great fattening, like so many trends in TV now, is in part the influence of streaming TV.
The only thing limiting the length of a Netflix or Amazon binge show is
your ability to sit without cramping. The menu is bigger, and so are
the portions. Meanwhile, basic cable channels realized that there was no
reason their “hourlong” series needed to end on the hour. If they
pushed a 10 p.m. drama’s end to, say, 11:17, they could give their
creators the kind of narrative real estate available on ad-free HBO and
Showtime..."
The Future of TV Is Happening Faster Than Anyone Thought. Every industry gets disrupted - just about the only thing that is predictable is disruption.
The Washington Post reports.
TODAY: Windy with periods of rain. Winds: E 20-30. High: 51
WEDNESDAY NIGHT: More rain, heaviest south of MSP. Low: 41
THURSDAY: Soggy. Rain tapers to showers. Winds: NE 10-20. High: 50
FRIDAY: More clouds than sun, drier. Winds: NE 8-13. Wake-up: 42. High: 58
SATURDAY: Dry start, PM showers possible. Winds: E 15-25. Wake-up: 47. High: near 60
SUNDAY: Damp start, drier day of the weekend. Winds: E 10-15. Wake-up: 46. High: 62
MONDAY: Partly sunny, less wind. Winds: NE 7-12. Wake-up: 45. High: 64
TUESDAY: Plenty of sunshine, pleasant. Winds: SW 8-13. Wake-up: 44. High: 67
* Photo credit above: Mike Hall.
Climate Stories...
The Math the Planet Relies on Isn't Adding Up Right Now. The warming is taking place faster than those "alarmist climate models" have been predicting. Chris Mooney reports at
The Washington Post: "
As
over 150 nations assemble to sign the Paris climate agreement in New
York on Friday, reams of new analysis are pouring out from the planet’s
vital number-crunchers, who look at the fundamental relationship between
how much carbon we put in the air and how much the planet’s temperature
increases as a result. And it’s adding up to a somber verdict: We seem
closer to must-avoid climate thresholds than we thought — and crossing
them may have bigger consequences than we recognize..."
Image credit: Planetary Visions LTD.
Why Fighting Climate Change Won't Destroy the Economy. Threat, and opportunity for renewal, resilience and reinvention. Here's an excerpt from
The Desert Sun: "
As
the reality of human-caused climate change has become harder to deny,
opponents of climate action have adopted a new talking point. Replacing
fossil fuels with clean energy, they say, would devastate the American
economy, sending electricity prices through the roof, forcing people to
abandon their cars and putting millions of people out of work.
There's one problem: Researchers who have studied the clean energy
transition disagree. Reducing greenhouse gas emissions wouldn't have the
dire economic consequences critics have predicted, several
comprehensive studies have found. On the contrary, experts say, dramatic
action to slash carbon emissions would be relatively inexpensive, if
not a money-saver — and that's without accounting for the long-term
benefits of avoiding catastrophic climate change..."
The Arctic Is Melting, and Researchers Just Lost a Key Tool to Observe It.
The Chicago Tribune has the story; here's the intro: "
Earlier
this month, a U.S. satellite known as F17 - which was primarily used
for meteorological measurements - experienced operational failures that
compromised the integrity of its data. And while there are similar
satellites in orbit that can take over the data collection for now,
they're old enough that scientists are unsure how much longer they'll
last. Now, with no government plans to launch a replacement any time
soon, scientists who rely on these satellites for valuable climate data
are beginning to worry about the future of their research. The problem
comes at a vital time, too - one when the Arctic, and other remote
regions, are seeing rapid changes and scientists badly need these
instruments to track them..."
Image credit above: "
This
image provided by NASA shows Arctic sea ice at it maximum, the lowest
on record. The winter maximum level of Arctic sea ice shrank to the
smallest on record, thanks to extraordinarily warm temperatures, federal
scientists said." (AP)
Saudi Arabia Plans for Life After Oil.
Bloomberg has the story.
Climate Scientists are Now Grading Science Journalism. Here's a clip from
The Guardian: "...
Climate Feedback intends to change that. It brings together a global network of scientists who use a new web-annotation platform
to provide feedback on climate change reporting. Their comments, which
bring context and insights from the latest research, and point out
factual and logical errors where they exist, remain layered over the
target article in the public domain. You can read them for yourself,
right in your browser. The scientists also provide a score on a
five-point scale to let you know whether the article is consistent with
the science. For the first time, Climate Feedback allows you to check
whether you can trust the latest breaking story on climate change..."
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