Made In China, tracking trains and Arkansas meteor.
#DOD says high altitude balloon over Montana yesterday was a spy balloon from #China. I did a quick run of the #NOAA HYSPLIT model to trace backwards the path of an object. Using 14K meters over Montana yesterday I get the following – Yup Central China!https://t.co/FHiG79f4th pic.twitter.com/DeZLjjkPei
— Dan Satterfield (@wildweatherdan) February 2, 2023
BREAKING 🚨: Mount Washington observatory in New Hampshire just recorded its coldest ever windchill of -104 F (-76 C)
— Latest in space 🪐 (@latestinspace) February 4, 2023
pic.twitter.com/0MfmdZNDmo
Sometimes on a midnight shift when the weather is quiet, we track trains instead of precipitation on radar! Whenever there is a strong morning inversion, weather radar can detect some interesting non-meteorological signatures. #kswx #trains pic.twitter.com/ei3ILzyzDx
— NWS Dodge City (@NWSDodgeCity) February 5, 2023
February 5-6, 2008:
— WX History (@weather_history) February 5, 2023
A substantial outbreak during Super Tuesday spawned 86 tornadoes throughout much of the South and lower Ohio Valley. 27 tornadoes were significant (EF2+), five of which reached EF4 intensity. 57 people were killed and more than 400 were injured. #wxhistory pic.twitter.com/5qKauNv3vB
Another view of last night’s meteor from Conway. #ARwx #ARStormTeam https://t.co/a9e9yTlwsB
— Joel Young, CBM (@joel_off_air) February 7, 2023
January Midwest climate summary in 3 words: WARM and WET
— MRCC (@MidwestClimate) February 8, 2023
🌡️ All states w/ top 10 warmest min temps
🌡️ IL, IN, MI, OH, WI w/ 2nd warmest min temps
🌧️ All states w/ above-normal precip
🌧️ Iowa 9th wettest
Browse @NOAANCEI January 2023 climate report at https://t.co/XdlTuE3mCd pic.twitter.com/zfHNl4ca3w
When we say #tornadoes can spin up very rapidly we ain’t kiddin’! This #tornado in Mississippi around 805pm went from nothing to TDS to dissipation in just a couple of radar scans pic.twitter.com/PvYcAmHsTG
— Sam Shamburger (@shamnadoes) February 9, 2023
The bright stripe of white on this map is where snow fell yesterday. It was a pretty narrow band of heavy, wet snow. #wiwx pic.twitter.com/sUT4ae6J72
— Keith Gibson (@WeatherManKG) February 10, 2023
February 9-10, 1959:
— WX History (@weather_history) February 10, 2023
An outbreak of seventeen tornadoes impacted numerous states from Oklahoma to Ohio. Seven of the tornadoes were significant (F2+). An F4 slammed St. Louis, damaging or destroying over 2000 structures. 21 people were killed and 358 were injured.#wxhistory pic.twitter.com/lEDncCQmL2