Hurricane Milton is barreling into the Atlantic Ocean after plowing across Florida as a Category 3 storm.
Tulsa, OK
Right Now
- Humidity: 40%
- Feels Like: 70°
- Heat Index: 70°
- Wind: 7 mph
- Wind Chill: 70°
- UV Index: 6 High
- Sunrise: 07:26:47 AM
- Sunset: 06:54 PM
- Dew Point: 45°
- Visibility: 10 mi
Today
A mix of clouds and sun. Very warm. High 87F. Winds SSE at 5 to 10 mph.
Tonight
Partly cloudy. Slight chance of a rain shower. Low 63F. Winds SSE at 5 to 10 mph.
Tomorrow
Sunny skies. Very warm. High near 90F. Winds S at 10 to 15 mph.
Next 12 Hours
Wind: SSE @ 8 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 41%
Wind Chill: 70°
Heat Index: 70°
UV Index: 2 Low
Visibility: 10 mi
Dew Point: 46°
Wind: SSE @ 8 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 35%
Wind Chill: 75°
Heat Index: 75°
UV Index: 4 Moderate
Visibility: 10 mi
Dew Point: 46°
Wind: SSE @ 8 mph
Precip: 2% Chance
Humidity: 32%
Wind Chill: 79°
Heat Index: 79°
UV Index: 5 Moderate
Visibility: 10 mi
Dew Point: 46°
Wind: SSE @ 7 mph
Precip: 7% Chance
Humidity: 32%
Wind Chill: 81°
Heat Index: 81°
UV Index: 6 High
Visibility: 10 mi
Dew Point: 48°
Wind: SSE @ 8 mph
Precip: 3% Chance
Humidity: 29%
Wind Chill: 83°
Heat Index: 83°
UV Index: 6 High
Visibility: 10 mi
Dew Point: 47°
Wind: SSE @ 8 mph
Precip: 2% Chance
Humidity: 27%
Wind Chill: 85°
Heat Index: 85°
UV Index: 4 Moderate
Visibility: 10 mi
Dew Point: 47°
Wind: SSE @ 9 mph
Precip: 4% Chance
Humidity: 26%
Wind Chill: 86°
Heat Index: 86°
UV Index: 3 Moderate
Visibility: 10 mi
Dew Point: 47°
Wind: SE @ 8 mph
Precip: 8% Chance
Humidity: 26%
Wind Chill: 86°
Heat Index: 86°
UV Index: 1 Low
Visibility: 10 mi
Dew Point: 47°
Wind: SE @ 8 mph
Precip: 0% Chance
Humidity: 29%
Wind Chill: 83°
Heat Index: 83°
UV Index: 0 Low
Visibility: 10 mi
Dew Point: 48°
Wind: SE @ 7 mph
Precip: 1% Chance
Humidity: 33%
Wind Chill: 79°
Heat Index: 79°
UV Index: 0 Low
Visibility: 10 mi
Dew Point: 47°
Wind: SE @ 5 mph
Precip: 1% Chance
Humidity: 37%
Wind Chill: 75°
Heat Index: 75°
UV Index: 0 Low
Visibility: 10 mi
Dew Point: 47°
Wind: SE @ 5 mph
Precip: 15% Chance
Humidity: 40%
Wind Chill: 73°
Heat Index: 73°
UV Index: 0 Low
Visibility: 10 mi
Dew Point: 47°
Milton’s growth Monday sets the stage for a dangerous storm surge in Tampa Bay and potential mass evacuations less than two weeks after a catastrophic Hurricane Helene swamped the coastline.
Rescue crews faced obstacles at every turn in North Carolina's remote mountains in the rush to reach those stranded or missing by Hurricane Helene's rampage that killed more than 200.
"It's definitely going to get worse before it gets better for northeastern Oklahoma and much of the state," said State Climatologist Gary McManus, adding October should bring above-normal temperatures.
Widespread devastation left behind by Hurricane Helene came to light Monday across the South, revealing a wasteland of splintered houses, crushed cargo containers and mud-covered highways.
Widespread devastation left behind by Hurricane Helene came to light Monday across the South, revealing a wasteland of splintered houses, crushed cargo containers and mud-covered highways.
Authorities rushed to airlift supplies and restore communications and roads in flooded Asheville, North Carolina, on Sunday as Florida residents gathered for church services amid the wreckage of Hurricane Helene.
Now a post-tropical cyclone, the storm was expected to hover over the Tennessee Valley on Saturday and Sunday, the National Hurricane Center said.
Hurricane Helene left an enormous path of destruction across the southeastern U.S. on Friday, snapping trees like twigs, tearing apart homes and sending rescue crews on desperate missions.
Hurricane Helene roared ashore as a powerful Category 4 storm in a sparsely populated region of Florida.
A slow-motion catastrophe is playing out in the coastal North Carolina village of Rodanthe, where 10 houses have fallen into the Atlantic since 2020.
An intensely hot summer in the United States shows signs it could bleed into the new season — a trend as the world warms from fossil fuel pollution.
Corn sweat is the process by which corn plants release moisture into the air to stay cool, and it brings the Midwest a surge in humidity every summer.