Originally Posted by
Jim Kyle
It's a bit difficult for most of us to realize just how far the art of weather prediction has come in the last 70 years. We tend to forget that the whole theory of "fronts" only began during WW2, and the very first tornado forecast issued anywhere was in 1948, by the weather officer at Tinker AFB -- and it was accurate! Civilians didn't get such forecasts until later, and then they were very cautiously worded to prevent panic.
During the mid-50s, I was the assigned weather writer for The Oklahoman and kept very close contact with Tom Kyle, the man in charge of the NWS station at Will Rogers Field and who issued the first civilian tornado warning (turns out he's a distant cousin though neither of us knew it at the time). He loaned me a few of the standard weather textbooks used in training new meteorologists. The universal theme, then, was that the best predictor of what would happen on April 2, 2014, was the history of what DID happen on April 2, 2013, and the second best predictor was the average of what had happened on all preceding April 2s. None of this concern with highs, lows, and those new-fangled fronts.
Which is not to say that Tom actually followed that advice; it just shows how recently the art became backed up by science. He also taught me about the hook echo, which had been discovered in South Pacific typhoons during the war, but cautioned me not to make its existence public because it couldn't distinguish between rotation at 5,000 feet and that on the ground. He issued warnings only after spotters confirmed a funnel on the ground.
And spotters were an essential part of the system even that far back. I was an active ham radio operator at the time, and often went to the weather bureau office to man the base station when spotters were in the field. They chased for two reasons: to warn the public, and to get movies of the storms for the NWS labs to better understand what was going on. The fellows I dispatched went out in teams of two: a ham operator who communicated and drove, and a NWS cameraman.
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