Subj : Todays Weather History
To   : ALL
From : Daryl Stout
Date : Sun Jun 12 2016 12:02 am

TODAY  Version 3.7   06/24/94       Copyright 1986, 1994  By Patrick Kincaid

Today is Sunday  June 12, 2016.
This is the 164th day of the year, there are 202 days left.

On this day...
   Weather data after 1990 is PARTIAL. For more current
   weather history, go to the National Climate Data Center
   website at www.ncdc.noaa.gov
   In 1881 Severe thunderstorms spawned more than half a dozen
           tornadoes in the Lower Missouri Valley.  Five of the
           tornadoes touched down near Saint Joseph MO.  In south
           central Kansas a tornado nearly wiped out the town of
           Floral.  Hail and high winds struck Iowa and southern
           Minnesota.  In Minnesota, Blue Earth City reported five
           inches of rain in one hour.
   In 1899 A tornado struck New Richmond, WI, killing 117, and
           injuring 200.
   In 1947 A heavy wet snow blanketed much of southern and central
           Wyoming, and gave many places their heaviest and latest
           snow of record.  Totals included 18.4 inches at Lander,
           8.7 inches at Cheyenne, and 4.5 inches at Casper.  (11th-
           12th)
   In 1969 Record late season snows covered parts of Montana.  Five
           inches was reported at Great Falls and east of Broadus.
           Billings MT tied their June record with lows of 32
           degrees on the 12th and the 13th.
   In 1983 The state of Utah was beseiged by floods and mudslides.
           Streets in downtown Salt Lake City were sandbagged and
           turned into rivers of relief.  The town of Thistle was
           completely inundated as a mudslide made a natural dam.
   In 1987 Thunderstorms in Nebraska produced softball size hail
           around Fremont and Ames, and 3.5 inches of rain in less
           than one hour.  Four and a half inches in less than an
           hour caused flooding around Ithica NE.  A tornado
           destroyed a mobile home near Broken Bow NE injuring both
           occupants.
   In 1988 Fifteen cities in the southeastern U.S. reported record
           low temperatures for the date, including Asheville with
           a reading of 40 degrees.  Drought conditions continued to
           intensify across the eastern half of the nation. Rainfall
           at Nashville TN was running 12.5 inches below normal.
   In 1989 Thunderstorms produced severe weather from Tennessee
           Valley to the Central Appalachians in the afternoon and
           evening, and produced severe weather in Oklahoma and
           Texas during the evening and night.  Thunderstorms
           spawned ten tornadoes, and there were 164 reports of
           large hail and damaging winds.  Thunderstorms produced
           wind gusts to 100 mph at Amarillo TX, and wind gusts to
           110 mph at Denton TX.  Hail three inches in diameter was
           reported at Tucumcari NM.
   In 2013 (12th-13th) Widespread severe storms over the Midwest
           during the late evening, became organized into a squall
           line over Indiana before Midnight EDT. The line then
           accelerated east across Ohio, Pennsylvania and New Jersey
           through Thursday morning, June 13, 2013 with an average '
           forward speed of 47 mph. The bow echo/derecho traveled
           over 400 miles in about 6 hours during its peak intensity
           resulting in over 100 damaging wind reports. The most
           significant damage appears to have occurred during the
           late evening across parts of Indiana.
   In 2014 Hurricane Cristina intensified rapidly to 150 mph in the
           Eastern Pacific basin. She is the earliest second major
           hurricane in the eastern Pacific, since reliable records
           rbegan in 1971, eclipsing the former record of Darby in
           2014 by 13 days. However, like Hurricane Amanda earlier
           in the season, which also got to category 4 status,
           Cristina is only a threat to shipping. With Cristina
           also becoming a category 4, it's the first time that
           there have been 2 category hurricanes through June in the
           Eastern North Pacific basin, since the beginning of the
           satellite era in 1966. Prior to Cristina, the earliest
           second category 4 hurricane was Hurricane Elida in 1984,
           which reached that threshold on July 1.

---
� Synchronet � The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, AR - wx1der.dyndns.org