MESONET TICKER ... MESONET TICKER ... MESONET TICKER ... MESONET TICKER ... August 17, 1999 August 17, 1999 August 17, 1999 August 17, 1999
The Sea Breeze ... in Oklahoma ???
This morning (and during the past several mornings, according to OCS personnel) a strange boundary was noticed in southeastern Oklahoma. The boundary pushed westward out of Pushmataha County and was picked up by the clear-air mode of the Twin Lakes WSR-88D radar.
After reviewing some Mesonet data from late last week, it appears the boundary may be an inland manifestation of the good-old "sea breeze" phenomenon. The sea breeze is the familiar onshore breeze which results from differential heating along the coastline.
Replace the ocean with moist or saturated land and, in the absence of large-scale forcing, a very closely related pattern can emerge. The "inland sea breeze" behaves the same way as its maritime big brother. The sea breeze "front" pushes from the moist region (this is analagous to the ocean) to the "dry" region (the continent).
Last Friday afternoon, significant rainfall was observed in far southeast Oklahoma, particularly in (you guessed it) Pushmataha County. The rest of the immediate region observed no measureable precipitation. The co-location of the origin of this morning's boundary and the well-defined region of rainfall suggest that the sea breeze was alive and well in southeast Oklahoma today.
For pictures of the set-up and this mornings radar echoes, please go to: http://ticker.mesonet.org/archive/19990817/boundary.html
Today in Mesonet History
Five years ago today, the Mesonet recorded its strongest wind gust to date: 113 MPH. The observation was taken within an intensely severe mesoscale convective complex near Lahoma. The Lahoma Mesonet station was destroyed by large hail shortly after the observation. Several persons in the area were injured and many homes were damaged. There were even two cases of hypothermia reported, when an automobile was partially filled with hail. The hail, rain and high winds led to exposure for the occupants of the car.
==================================================
The OCS/Mesonet Ticker
https://ticker.mesonet.org/
To subscribe or unsubscribe from the Ticker
or for questions about the Ticker or its content
Phone or Email the Ticker Manager at OCS
Phone: 405-325-2253 Email: ticker@mesonet.org
---------------------------------------------------
-C- Copyright 2024 Oklahoma Climatological Survey
===================================================
|