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Donald L. Kelly
,
Joseph T. Schaefer
, and
Charles A. Doswell III

Abstract

While the climatology of excessive rain and tornadoes is well-documented, little is known of storms that produce high winds or large hail. The characteristics of the approximately 75 000 severe thunderstorms which occurred in the United States from 1955 through 1983 are analyzed in an attempt to rectify this situation.

The distribution of over 29 000 storms causing hail larger than 19 mm shows marked diurnal, seasonal, and geographic preferences. These storms occur most frequently during the midafternoon hours of May and June in a zone running from central Texas to Nebraska. Spring storms tend to occur south of the Kansas-Nebraska border and summer storms north of it.

Thunderstorm winds which produce either “structural” damage or are reported as faster than 25.8 m s−1 generated about 46 000 reports. These storms typically occur during midafternoon in June and July. While the geographic distribution of violent windstorms is similar to that hailstorms, a zone of weaker severe thunderstorm gusts lies from northern Iowa to central Ohio. During May, windstorms are predominant across the plains area, but by August thew storms are indigenous only to the northern Midwest.

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