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Thunderstorms: Windy Punch to Okla. - Press Release, 2001
News release
issued May 31, 2001, effective immediately. For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580)
224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org
Thunderstorms deliver windy punch to much of Oklahoma
ARDMORE, Okla. - Residents in many parts of Oklahoma are
continuing to cope with broken limbs and debris from the devastating Memorial Day weekend thunderstorms
that brought damaging winds from the Panhandle to the Red River.
Ferocious winds associated with a southeastward-moving thunderstorm complex affected most of Oklahoma
west of a line from Pawhuska to Durant. The strongest wind gust (93 miles per hour) recorded by the
state's automated weather reporting network (Mesonet) occurred at Ardmore in Carter County just before
midnight on May 27.
Gusts of more than 80 miles per hour were recorded by Mesonet
sites in Ellis, Dewey, Beaver, Washita and McClain counties. Woodward, Major, Garfield, Osage, Custer,
Comanche, Cotton, Garvin, Murray and Johnston counties were hit with winds of more than 70 miles per
hour, according to Mesonet data. Two dozen additional counties experienced wind gusts in excess of 50
miles per hour.
The thunderstorm complex formed during the day Sunday in
southern Kansas and gradually developed southward and westward into northern Oklahoma during the afternoon.
The storms consolidated into a northeast-southwest line and began moving rapidly to the southeast, accompanied
by heavy rain, frequent lightning, hail and the powerful winds.
The line began to form bow-shaped protrusions as it accelerated its movement toward the Red River. These
bow-shaped areas produced some of the strongest winds.
"Severe thunderstorms with damaging winds are not unusual
in Oklahoma, as anyone who has lived here for a while knows very well," said Joe Lobell, who spent
two years as a weathercaster in Texas and now serves as public relations director at the Noble Foundation
in Ardmore. "But this was unusual because of the huge area impacted by the damaging winds. On paper
the geographical distribution of the strong winds recorded by the Mesonet sties looked more like a hurricane
than a thunderstorm."
The Noble Foundation helped fund the development of the Oklahoma
Mesonet, which includes more than 100 automated weather stations located throughout Oklahoma.
The storm system weakened after crossing the Red River into
Texas, but not before causing power outages in the Texas counties along the border.
"All the ingredients came together in the right place
at the right time for this widespread severe weather event," Lobell said. "Power lines, buildings
and trees all suffered significant damage. And many of the trees in the southern part of the state were
in the process of recovering from the record-breaking ice storm that hit that area last Christmas."
But it could have been worse.
"I guess the silver lining to this event was that there
were relatively few tornadoes reported with these storms, and that's always good news," Lobell
added.
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The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation,
headquartered in Ardmore, Okla., is a non-profit organization conducting agricultural,
forage biotechnological, and plant biology research; providing grants to numerous
non-profit charitable, educational and health organizations; and assisting farmers
and ranchers through educational and consultative agricultural programs.
To learn more, check out the Noble
Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org.
More news releases available at www.noble.org/Press_Release
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