

In eastern Oklahoma, local rainfall totals exceeded 10” in less than 2 days.Ģ011 January 31-February 1: A record breaking blizzard made its way across Oklahoma, dumping 12.1” of snow in Oklahoma City and 14.0” of snow in Tulsa. 3 tornadoes were confirmed in southern Oklahoma as a result of this storm. 7.62” of rain was recorded at the Will Rogers Airport, breaking the previous record of 7.53” set in 1970.Ģ010 September 8-10: The remnants of Tropical Storm Hermine brought large amounts of rainfall to the state of Oklahoma as well as a small, late-season tornado outbreak. Of the 56 confirmed tornadoes, 13 of these were considered significant, two of which were rated an EF-4.Ģ010 June 14: A historic rainfall event in Oklahoma City broke the all-time record for most precipitation in a single day.

Totals in extreme Northeastern Oklahoma neared 10” during an already active winter season.Ģ010 May 10: A devastating, 56-tornado outbreak ravaged central and eastern Oklahoma, causing 3 fatalities and 117 injuries. The Eastern half of the state did not receive as much ice, but snowfall totals were in excess of 5” for much of Northeastern Oklahoma.Ģ010 March 20-21: Another late season winter storm brought heavy snowfall and frigid temperatures to the state as the start of spring was just around the corner. Southwest and central Oklahoma were the hardest hit areas with radial ice accumulations up to 1.5”. For more detailed daily summaries (since 2003) please view the Oklahoma monthly climate summaries.Ģ009-2010 Winter: With 23.5” of snow, Oklahoma City placed 5 th on its list of total seasonal snowfall records.Ģ010 January 28-29: A strong winter storm brought significant ice and snow totals to much of the state along with significant power outages. The Oklahoma Weather Timeline provides a decade-by-decade listing of interesting or disastrous events that have occurred in Oklahoma's weather history.
