Ticker for August 1, 2006

                
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August 1, 2006 August 1, 2006 August 1, 2006 August 1, 2006


Send in the subs! While the entire Ticker staff is away on vacation, the
substitute Ticker staff's arm was twisted to send this press release, hot of
the...uh, presses. We know we're a poor substitute, but we're looking into steroids.

July 2006 Far From Warmest For Oklahoma

Gary McManus
OCS Climatologist
And
Howard Johnson
Assistant State Climatologist, Retired

Oklahomans are undoubtedly convinced, global warming news reports in tow, that
the recently completed July was one of the hottest the state has ever seen.
?Close, but no cigar? might be an apt reply, but in all actuality, it really
wasn?t even close. The average temperature statewide, according to the Oklahoma
Mesonet, did manage to tie 1914 and 1956 for the 14th warmest July on record at
83.9 degrees, but that pales in comparison to the drought-induced heat of previous
years. Not even July 1980, the summer Oklahoma spent in an Easy Bake Oven, can
top the July of 1954, when the statewide average temperature soared to 88.1 degrees.
In fact, the top-10 warmest Julys are dominated by extreme drought years,
including the Dust Bowl years of 1934 and 1936, in addition to the more recent
drought episodes of 1998 and 2001, and the aforementioned 1980.

Oklahoma City?s average temperature was 86.2 degrees, its 8th hottest July
since 1891. Tulsa?s 84.7 degrees would rank as the 26th warmest July since
1905 for that city.

Six different Julys have severely tested the upper limit of Oklahomans?
endurance of the heat. During the July of 1901, temperatures exceeded 100 degrees
somewhere in the state every day, reaching 110 degrees on 10 of those days.
In 1934, the Weather Bureau office in Oklahoma City calculated a statewide average
daily maximum temperature of 102.8 degrees. All summer crops failed during the
brutal July of 1936. Every reporting station in the state recorded triple digit
temperatures at some time during July 1954 with 99 of the 129 stations reporting
temperaturesof 110 degrees or higher. Thirty-seven heat-related fatalities were
reported during July 1980 as temperatures reached 100 degrees or higher somewhere
in the state every day. Seventy-nine of 174 reporting stations recorded no measurable
precipitation during that month. In July 1998, a heat wave and developing drought
led to 20 fatalities during the month. The economic loss to agriculture and
related enterprises, as estimated by the state Department of Agriculture,
exceeded 2 billion dollars.

The state?s record high temperature (120 degrees) has been attained six times,
three of those coming during July. The thermometer indicated 120 degrees at
Altus on July 19, 1936, at Alva on July 18, 1936, and at Tishomingo on July 26,
1943.

The current year is still on track to finish as the state?s warmest on record,
with a January-July statewide average temperature of 62.8 degrees, 3.6 degrees
above normal. July 2006 was also the state?s 30th driest on record with a
statewide average precipitation total of 1.76 inches, about an inch below normal.

Oklahoma's Warmest Julys
Year Temp.
1954 88.1
1980 87.3
1934 87.3
1998 85.9
1936 85.7
2001 85.7
1978 85.6
1901 85.2
1969 84.7
1964 84.7
1966 84.7
1986 84.6
1957 84.4
1914 83.9
1956 83.9
2006 83.9
1939 83.7
1955 83.6
1977 83.5


August 1 in Mesonet History

Record Value Station Year
Maximum Temperature 115°F KIN2 2012
Minimum Temperature 53°F KENT 2018
Maximum Rainfall 5.04″ NOWA 1995

Mesonet records begin in 1994.

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