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New Record Set! Largest hailstone ever!
Posted: 07.30.2010 at 6:26 PM
Wayne Mahar

Wayne Mahar has been CNY's Chief Meteorologist since 1985.

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Earlier this week, CNYcentral meteorologist Peter Hall told us about a “possible” new record hailstone having fallen from a thunderstorm in South Dakota.

It was only “possible” as the National Weather Service and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration had to delve into the details and verify the critical measurements of this hail stone. After all, as the saying goes, records are mean’t to be broken, but lets be sure it is in fact a new record!

Well, now we are sure, and a new record it is! 

Below is the official announcement from NOAA made earlier today.

Check the critical statistics on this South Dakota record breaking hailstone.

What’s the biggest hail you’ve ever seen?  Were you stuck outside when it happened?

Let me know.

South Dakota Storm Produces Record Hailstone 
 
NOAA’s National Climate Extremes Committee, responsible for validating national weather records, has declared a hailstone found last week in Vivian, S.D., to be the largest in diameter and heaviest ever recovered in the United States.
 
Found after a July 23, 2010, severe thunderstorm by Vivian resident Les Scott, the hailstone is 8.0 inches in diameter and weighs 1.9375 pounds (1 pound, 15 ounces) with a circumference of 18.62 inches. These measurements displace the previous hailstone record for weight, previously 1.67 pounds for a stone in Coffeyville, Kan., in 1970. They also surpass the record for diameter, which was 7 inches for a hailstone found in Aurora, Neb., in 2003. The Aurora hailstone still holds the record for circumference of 18.75 inches.
 
 “I’m just glad nobody got hurt and hope the town will recover soon,” Scott said.
 
David Hintz, warning coordination meteorologist at NOAA’s Aberdeen weather forecast office said a local power outage likely led to the hailstone melting some before it could be measured. “Mr. Scott told me the area was littered with large hailstones and the largest had a greater diameter when he first found it. He immediately stored it and several others in his freezer, but a power outage caused some melting.”
After getting Hintz’ notice of a possible record hailstone, personnel at National Weather Service Central Region headquarters in Kansas City, Mo., requested activation of the National Climatic Extremes Committee to examine and judge Scott’s hailstone. Personnel from the Aberdeen office traveled to Vivian to measure and weigh the hailstone, and then turned their findings over to the three-person committee. After a thorough review of the facts, committee members certified its record-breaking status.
 
Information about the National Climatic Extremes Committee and existing weather records may be found at
 
http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/extremes/ncec.
 
NOAA understands and predicts changes in the Earth’s environment, from the depths of the ocean to the surface of the sun, and conserves and manages our coastal and marine resources. Visit
 
http://www.noaa.gov.

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