Subj : Today's Weather History
To   : All
From : Daryl Stout
Date : Mon Mar 13 2017 12:10 am

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

Today is Monday  March 13, 2017.
This is the 72nd day of the year, there are 293 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 1907 A storm produced a record 5.22 inches of rain in
           24 hours at Cincinnati OH.  (12th-13th)
   In 1951 The state of Iowa experienced a record snowstorm.
           The storm buried Iowa City under 27 inches of snow.
   In 1977 Baltimore MD received an inch of rain in eight minutes.
   In 1987 A winter storm produced heavy snow in the Sierra Nevada
           Range of California, and the Lake Tahoe area of Nevada.
           Mount Rose NV received 18 inches of new snow.
   In 1988 Unseasonably cold weather prevailed from the Plateau
           Region to the Appalachians.  Chadron NE, recently
           buried under 33 inches of snow, was the cold spot in the
           nation with a low of 19 degrees below zero.
   In 1989 Residents of the southern U.S. viewed a once in a life-
           time display of the "Northern Lights".  Unseasonably
           warm weather continued in the southwestern U.S.
           The record high of 88 degrees at Tucson AZ was their
           seventh in a row.  In southwest Texas, the temperature
           at Sanderson soared from 46 degrees at 8 AM to
           90 degrees at 11 AM.
   In 1990 Thunderstorms produced severe weather from northwest
           Texas to Wisconsin, Iowa and Nebraska during the day,
           and into the night.  Severe thunderstorms spawned
           59 tornadoes, including twenty-six strong or violent
           tornadoes, and there were about two hundred other
           reports of large hail or damaging winds.  There were
           forty-eight tornadoes in Kansas, Nebraska and Iowa,
           and some of the tornadoes in those three states were
           the strongest of record for so early in the season
           and for so far northwest in the United States.
           The most powerful tornado of the day was one which
           tore through the central Kansas community of Hesston.
           The tornado killed two persons, injured sixty others,
           and caused 22 million dollars along its 67-mile path.
           The tornado had a life span of two hours.  Another
           tornado tracked 124 miles across southeastern Nebraska
           injuring eight persons and causing more than five
           million dollars damage during its three hour life span.


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