The rains that soaked central Oklahoma were the result of a severe weather outbreak that also spun up an estimated 51 tornadoes and dropped large hail.
While tornadoes normally take center stage during severe weather season, for Oklahoma City on Wednesday, it was torrential rains and flash flooding that overshadowed the twisters.
The city recorded more than 7 inches of rain in 24 hours, the third-highest single day rainfall total for any day since record-keeping began in 1891. The deluge caused major flooding that damaged roads and buildings and sent cars floating down streets turned into rivers.
While people in the Great Plains are no strangers to heavy downpours—the largest 24-hour rainfall total was recorded not long ago in June 2010—it’s something they, along with the rest of the nation, as the world warms and the atmosphere sucks up more moisture.
While the 24-hour rain total ranked as the third highest for the city, the came in at . Other areas in central Oklahoma may have seen even greater rainfall totals—up to 12 inches—according to the.
OMG....I have never seen this happen to a tornado shelter. We told you this rainfall in OKC was historic
— Damon Lane (@KOCOdamonlane)
suggest that in terms of 24-hour rainfall, yesterday’s storm was a 1-in-25 year event. Much of that rain fell in just a 6-hour interval, though, which is closer to a 1-in-100 year event, according to the same records.
Carbon dioxide levels , reaching a global average of 400 parts per million (ppm). The extra heat trapped by all that extra carbon dioxide has raised the global average temperature by 1.6°F since the beginning of the 20th century.
An increase in heavy downpours has already been observed across the U.S., though how much varies from region to region. The biggest increases have been in the Northeast and Midwest, though the Great Plains, which includes Oklahoma, has seen a 21 percent increase in such downpours since 1958, according to the .
Such large amounts of water are incredibly powerful and can tear up roads, sidewalks and bridges, and can carry away most cars.
Damage from the floods in Oklahoma City on Wednesday caused one elementary school to close for the remainder of the school year. The rains also resulted in numerous from cars and mobile homes by people trapped in the rising waters and caused at least one death from a woman who drowned in her storm shelter.
Climate Central. The article was
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