Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
May 2004 tornado outbreak sequence – For the second consecutive May and the last occurrence to-date (2024), a fourth High Risk day was issued in an eight-day period. The High Risk lasted the entire Day 1 Outlook cycle. Eighty-six tornadoes were confirmed; two were rated F3. [221] Included 35% tornado risk area above minimum threshold of 25% ...
2024: California [309] 20,000: 0: Mountain Fire [310] December 10: 2024: California [311] 4,037 [nb 2] 0: Franklin Fire [312] January 8: 2025: California [313] 55,082 [nb 2] 27 [314] January 2025 Southern California wildfires [315] – First extremely critical risk day in January since 2008, and the first extremely critical risk day in January ...
High risk convective outlook issued by the Storm Prediction center at 13:00 UTC on May 6. Starting April 30, the Storm Prediction Center noted that certain models, including the ECMWF, forecasted a multi-day period of high instability and supportive wind shear across the Southern and Central Plains, [10] and by May 1, a 15% risk was added across Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, and northern Texas. [11]
The risk of severe thunderstorms and tornadoes has ended from central Georgia, the western Florida Panhandle and much of Tennessee on west as of Sunday morning.
The Lower Keys are under a “slight risk of excessive rainfall, while the rest of the island chain remains in a Marginal Risk,” the Key West weather service wrote on the social site X.
August is a busy month for thunderstorms in Florida, with downpours typically dumping 6-10 inches of rain on the central and southern parts of the peninsula throughout the month.
Many of the most prolific severe weather days were high risk days. Such days are rare; a high risk is typically issued (at the most) only a few times each year (see List of Storm Prediction Center high risk days). High risk areas are usually surrounded by a larger moderate risk area, where uncertainty is greater or the threat is somewhat lower ...
As Hurricane Ian snakes toward the Sunshine State over the next few days, officials worry about a potentially dangerous storm surge along Florida’s west coast and panhandle.