Public Information Statement
Issued by NWS Wichita, KS

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397 NOUS43 KICT 311200 PNSICT KSZ032-033-047>053-067>072-082-083-091>096-098>100-311500- Public Information Statement National Weather Service Wichita KS 700 AM CDT Fri May 31 2024 ...ON THIS DATE IN WEATHER HISTORY... In 1985, many areas of the Lower Great Lakes were ripped apart by an outbreak of 41 tornadoes from Northeast Ohio to extreme southern Ontario, Canada. Eight were violent, one of which was an F5. Three are especially noteworthy. One was a violent F4 with a track 69 miles long and averaged 1.5 miles wide as it roared through Central Pennsylvania. At one point, the vortex reached 2.2 MILES WIDE. As it tore through a state forest, it obliterated around 90,000 trees. It was very fortunate that no towns were hit. An F5 tornado, with a track 47 miles long and around one half mile wide, tore through extreme Northeast Ohio and Northwest Pennsylvania. It killed 18 and injured around 310. Although Northeast Ohio bore the brunt of the tornado`s wrath where it tracked 33 miles and caused around $65 million damage, it nearly wiped Wheatland Pennsylvania off the map. It is the only F5 tornado to have struck the Keystone State. In Canada, one F4 tornado raced 67 miles and was around 1 mile wide. It passed about 25 miles northwest of Toronto and killed 4 people. In all, 76 people were killed and around 890 injured during this outbreak. && In 2015, a nasty May ended across the Southern Plains as severe thunderstorms producing hail that reached grapefruit-sized, destructive winds that reached close to 100 mph, numerous tornadoes, and torrential rains invaded these areas repeatedly. Most of Southern Oklahoma was overwhelmed by rainfalls from 15 to 25 inches that May, as well as much of North Texas. Durant was inundated by 24.42 inches which nearly doubled the May record of 12.57 inches set in 1982. Marietta`s May total of 23.44 inches was just over double the record of 11.56 inches set in 1950, while monthly totals across Oklahoma City ranged from 19.48 to 23.10 inches in Norman. No doubt, with such phenomenal rainfall, numerous rivers rose to the occasion with record stages reached at several locations. The most dramatic rises occurred in Central Texas on the 23rd and 24th where the Blanco River had soared to a record 40.21 feet at Wimberley, located 40 miles southwest of Austin, when the gauge was lost. A 31-foot rise occurred in 2 1/2 HOURS. The flash flooding in Wimberley was no doubt catastrophic. Around 300 houses were damaged or destroyed and despite a widespread rescue effort, several people drowned. The Norman Oklahoma Forecast Office issued 3 Flash Flood Emergencies. Parts of I-35 had to be barricaded. Initial reports were that 108 tornadoes struck Texas and Oklahoma. The most significant was the massive vortex that struck Van Texas, located about 50 miles east of Dallas where 2 were killed, dozens injured, and around 30 percent of the town demolished on the evening of May 10th.Several houses vanished. In 1941, thunderstorms swamped Burlington Kansas with 12.59 inches of rain. This had established a 24-hour Kansas State rainfall record until June 22, 1967 when 13.53 inches swamped a volunteer weather station 3 miles west southwest of Woodruff, which is located in Phillips County. $$ Auto