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This profile was automatically generated using 23 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 23 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 23 references Web References
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1. www.honoluluadvertiser.com
www.honoluluadvertiser.com/app - [Cached]Published on: 2/3/2008 Last Visited: 2/3/2008
The island was under a flash flood warning, which means flooding was occurring, said Wes Browning, National Weather Service director of operations.
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On O'ahu, moderate to heavy rainfall was reported, Browning said.
Rain gauges around O'ahu yesterday showed Poamoho had nearly 4 inches of rainfall over the previous 24 hours, while 1.63 inches of rain landed in the Upper Nu'uanu area.
As thunderstorms were forecast to build overnight and hit Maui and O'ahu, Hawai'i County continued to bear the brunt of the weather.
"The Big Island is just getting hammered with moderate to heavy rain," Browning said. -
2. The Lake Sun Leader Online: News
www.lakesunleader.com/articles - [Cached]Published on: 1/27/2004 Last Visited: 1/27/2004
National Weather Service Meteorologist Wes Browning said the lake area sustained the predicted level of ice coverage, up to 1/2 inch in some spots.
"Weather conditions were pretty much the same throughout Mid-Missouri," Browning said. "The hardest area of the lake hit by ice was in Iberia in Miller County. They got the worst of it."
Browning said the reason the icy blast hit this part of the country so rapidly was due to a large arctic air mass that draped over Canada.
"It ran from the Atlantic Ocean all the way to the Canadian Rockies," Browning said. "They hit lows of 20-40 degrees below zero, and that didn't include a wind chill."
Browning said Missouri can be thankful it didn't get colder.
"In Saskatchewan the temperature plunged to 49 degrees below zero," Browning said. -
3. www.honoluluadvertiser.com
www.honoluluadvertiser.com/app - [Cached]Published on: 8/10/2007 Last Visited: 8/11/2007
A five-day forecast for Flossie won't be made until tomorrow, when the storm is expected to cross 140 degrees west longitude, said Wes Browning, director of operations at the National Weather Service in Honolulu and deputy director of the Central Pacific Hurricane Center.
"Right now the cone of uncertainty, the potential extended track storm, doesn't even reach the state," Browning said.

