National Weather Service United States Department of Commerce

Record Heat for the Intermountain West and Northern Plains; Heavy Rainfall and Severe Weather Threats

Record setting heat is expected over the next several days from the Intermountain West through the northern Plains. Furthermore, fire weather concerns increase with dry and breezy conditions. Meanwhile, heavy rainfall and severe thunderstorm threats for the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys, central Appalachians and Southeast today. The threat shifts to central Gulf Coast and across central Texas this week. Read More >

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General Information

This page will load in a default fashion, with the station identifier as a variable in the URL
Example: https://www.weather.gov/wrh/timeseries?site=kslc

A table will appear with 48 hours worth of data from that station. A full list of elements that are chartable is below (Note - Data availability varies by station):

  • Temperature
  • Dew Point Temperature
  • Relative Humidity
  • Wind Chill
  • Wind Direction
  • Wind Speed and Gusts
  • Fuel Temperature
  • Fuel Moisture
  • Sea Level Pressure
  • Altimeter Setting
  • Station Pressure
  • Solar Radiation
  • Soil Temperature
  • Road Temperature
  • Road Sub-Surface Temperature
  • Accumulated Precipitation
  • One Minute Precipitation
  • Five Minute Precipitation
  • Ten Minute Precipitation
  • Fifteen Minute Precipitation
  • Thirty Minute Precipitation
  • One Hour Precipitation
  • Three Hour Precipitation
  • Six Hour Precipitation
  • Twenty four Hour Precipitation
  • Snow Depth
  • Snow Interval
  • Twenty four Hour Snowfall
  • Snow-Water Equivalent
  • Water Temperature

Clouds and Weather

  • Cloud height sensors reach about 12,000 feet above the ground. At major airports, this information can be augmented by a trained observer.
  • This can sometimes mean that conditions are clear, when a cloud base is above 12,000 feet.

Decoding Cloud Information:

  • Up to 3 layers (the lowest 3 layers) of clouds can be reported.
  • The first 3 letters of a cloud group describe the amount of sky coverage. The last 3 numbers indicate the base of that layer, above the ground x 100 feet.
  • SKC: Sky Clear.
  • CLR: No clouds below 12,000 feet above ground level, as detected by automatic equipment.
  • FEW: Few Clouds - Between 1/8 and 2/8 of the sky is covered by clouds.
  • SCT: Scattered Clouds - Between 3/8 and 4/8 of the sky is covered by clouds.
  • BKN: Broken Clouds - Between 5/8 and 7/8 of the sky is covered by clouds.
  • OVC: Overcast - 8/8 of the sky is covered by clouds.
  • VV: Vertical Visibility - An indefinite cloud ceiling caused by fog, rain, snow, etc.

Issues

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