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A subbox for providing additional historical data about a weather event. Template parameters This template prefers block formatting of parameters. Parameter Description Type Status Child display? child Whether this is a child box or not. Use `yes`, unless you're using this box standalone. Default yes Example yes Boolean optional Body style bodystyle Custom CSS for the box Default border ...
To identify measurement interval (e.g. 10-minute, 3-minute), supply |interval= with the number of minutes. To override the text below the header entirely, use |subheader=. If a category is not used, |type= may be used instead to refer to the type of meteorological event. The value of |type= will be used as the header text.
The result is the nearly daily development of clouds that produce thunderstorms. For example, "Lightning Alley"—an area from Tampa to Orlando—experiences an extremely high density of lightning strikes. As of 2007, there were as many as 50 strikes per square mile (about 20 per km 2) per year.
This graph's main version resides at Template:Graph:Weather monthly history. Please make or suggest all the changes there, and copy it everywhere else (until the copying is automated) Please make or suggest all the changes there, and copy it everywhere else (until the copying is automated)
If the template has a separate documentation page (usually called "Template:template name/doc"), add [[Category:Graph, chart and plot templates]] to the <includeonly> section at the bottom of that page. Otherwise, add <noinclude>[[Category:Graph, chart and plot templates]]</noinclude> to the end of the template code, making sure it starts on ...
Highest number of tropical storms in a season: 39 official storms during the 1964 Pacific typhoon season: May 12, 1964 – December 17, 1964: Northwest Pacific Ocean [38] Warmest eye: 34.0 °C (93.2 °F) at 700 hPa height: August 19, 1979: Typhoon Judy in the northwest Pacific Ocean [39] Coldest cloud tops produced by a tropical cyclone
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As well as giving a link to the data source, this sort of chart should include: (a) the date the weather data was accessed (eg. chart compiled in July 2007); (b) the date the source itself compiled the data (eg. data published in 2005); and (c) the date over which the data was averaged (data is the averages over 50 years from 1945-1995).