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It's not boiling, because it's no longer 100 degrees *wink*
Published: 7/26/2011 7:00 AM
Last Modified: 7/25/2011 5:37 PM


What's the opposite of boiling? Freezing of course, like this poor Tulsa tree covered in ice back in January, following some overnight freezing rain. TOM GILBERT/Tulsa World File

On my day off Friday, the Associated Press wire moved a story entitled "Northeast braces for temps near boiling point."

Come again?

First sentence: "The extreme heat that's been roasting the eastern U.S. is only expected to get worse, and residents are bracing themselves for temperatures near and above boiling point."

Most versions of this story have since been corrected, but there's a few original ones out there. Here's one.

So... this is what 100-degree normal temperatures have gotten us, huh? The temperatures are so hot and unbearable that we are confusing 100 degrees Fahrenheit (Oklahoma and many other areas) with 100 degrees Celsius (equal to 212 degrees Fahrenheit).

Holy cow. Wow. But, this will serve as the perfect transition to what we experienced Monday: No triple digit temperatures, Celsius or Fahrenheit, on Monday in Tulsa.

Our high was in the mid 90s, thanks to some actual precipitation showing up on radar (read more on why the radar might be deceiving you here). overnight Monday and Sunday in northeast Oklahoma, as Jerry mentioned earlier here. While we only recorded trace amounts of rain Sunday, keep in mind that the National Weather Service takes these numbers at the airport, so your garden might have gotten a little bit more relief.

While we have probably felt like we are boiling, rest assured, we are nowhere near 100 degrees Celsius for our daily high temperatures (Read more on Celsius versus Fahrenheit here). And for the time being, we're not even 100 degrees Fahrenheit anymore.

--Althea Peterson

PS: The sub-100 temps aren't going to last. Read more on Tulsa's forecast here.



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Almanac
View 2012
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun
Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
TemperaturePrecipitation
DateHigh TempLow TempTotalMonth to dateHistorical average
1 44° 16° 0 0.00 0.05
2 59° 24° 0 0.00 0.11
3 57° 33° 0 0.00 0.16
4 68° 37° Trace 0.00 0.21
5 69° 29° 0 0.00 0.26
6 66° 33° 0 0.00 0.32
7 59° 38° 0.05 0.05 0.38
8 51° 34° 0 0.05 0.44
9 44° 36° 0.01 0.06 0.51
10 62° 37° 0.07 0.13 0.57
11 54° 28° 0 0.13 0.64
12 44° 30° 0.25 0.38 0.70
13 55° 40° 0.01 0.39 0.76
14 ° ° 0.83
15 ° ° 0.89
16 ° ° 0.95
17 ° ° 1.02
18 ° ° 1.09
19 ° ° 1.16
20 ° ° 1.23
21 ° ° 1.31
22 ° ° 1.38
23 ° ° 1.46
24 ° ° 1.53
25 ° ° 1.61
26 ° ° 1.69
27 ° ° 1.77
28 ° ° 1.85

Weather World

Follow Jerry Wofford on Twitter for updates during severe weather conditions.

Tulsa weather milestones of 2013 (as of Feb. 12)

Highest temperature: 70 on Jan. 11 (Record: 115 on Aug. 15, 1936)
Lowest temperature: 15 on Jan. 16 (Record: Minus-16 on Jan. 22, 1930)
Hottest month (average): 40.5 degrees in January (Record: 91.7 degrees on July 1980)
Coldest month (average): 40. 5 degrees in January (Record: 21.7 in January 1918)
Most snowfall (day): 0.1 of an inch on Feb. 12(Record: 13.2 inches on Feb. 1, 2011)
Most snowfall (month): 0.1 of an inch in February(Record: 22.5 inches in February 2011)
Most rainfall (day): 0.91 of an inch on Jan. 29 (Record: 9.27 inches on May 26-27, 1984)
Most rainfall (month): 1.54 of an inch in January (Record: 18.18 inches on September 1971)
Highest wind speed: 30 mph on Jan. 30
Previous day with any rain: Feb. 12
Previous day with 1 inch or more of rain: Oct. 17, 2012
Previous day with any snow: Feb. 12
Previous day with freezing temperatures: Feb. 12
Read regular updates on Oklahoma's unpredictable weather and learn more about meteorology from the Tulsa office of the National Weather Service.

>> Visit the main weather page
>> Send us your weather photos
>> Meet the forecasters

Contributors
Staff Writer Althea Peterson started writing for the Tulsa World in March 2007 after previous stops at the Norman Transcript in 2006 and the Oklahoma Gazette in 2005. She followed her older brother from rural Wisconsin (with a public school that never seemed to call snow days) to the University of Oklahoma, but did not follow his pursuit to study meteorology. However, she tries to find as many opportunities to report on the weather as possible.

Staff Writer Jerry Wofford came to the Tulsa World in 2010 from The Manhattan Mercury in Manhattan, Kan. Originally from western Arkansas and a graduate of the University of Oklahoma, Jerry has lived in Tornado Alley his entire life and is one of those people who goes outside when the sirens go off.

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