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k UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF LOCAL CLIMATOLOGICAL DATA
COMMERCE
PUBLICATION
ANNUAL SUMMARY WITH COMPARATIVE DATA
HUNTSVILLE, ALABAMA
■ I c nCDADTWlCNT Ac r'AWiMEDr'E NATIONAL OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION
1973 U.b. UtP An I Mt lx I Uh UUMIVItKUfc ENVIRONMENTAL DATA SERVICE
NARRATIVE CLIMATOLOGICAL SUMMARY
Huntsville has a temperate climate. Summers are by locally severe weather conditions than thunder
characterized by warm and humid weather, with storms in other seasons.
rather frequent thundershowers. Winters are
usually rather cool, but vary considerably from Day to day weather changes in the summer season
one year to the next. are rather small other than the occurrence of
thundershowers that provide relief from the heat
The city of Huntsville is almost surrounded by on about one-third of the days. Temperatures fre
the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains. The quently rise to 90° or higher, but reach 100° only
Tennessee River winds its way westward about on rare occasions.
7 miles to the south of the City, and the broad,
fertile Tennessee River Valley, with flat to During the fall the weather is usually dry and
gentle rolling terrain, extends to the west. The pleasant. The airmasses are cooler in the
weather station is located at the Huntsville- lower levels and the thundershower activity
Madison County Airport, which is 11 miles of summer decreases sharply. The dry air is
southwest from the center of Huntsville. Moun very favorable for the harvesting of cotton
tain ridges, with elevations from 1,200 to 1,600 and hay crops, important items in the economy
feet above m.s.l., are located some 14 miles of thb area. A major departure from the re
to the northeast, east, andsoutheast of the airport. latively dry weather of fall is an occasional
rainy spell of one or more days associated with
Cold airmasses from the continent are pre a decadent hurricane drifting northward from the
dominant over the area during the winter season, Gulf of Mexico.
but at times mild air from the Gulf of Mexico
spreads northward to Huntsville or beyond, and Precipitation amounts for the drier months of the
may persist for several days in succession. fall are appreciably less than for the relatively
The contrast between airmasses frequenting the wet season in winter; however, with the exception
region in winter provides a potential source of of an infrequent long dry spell, precipitation
energy for producing extensive periods of low distribution is such as to provide adequate
cloudiness and rain, the result being that four moisture for plant growth throughout the year.
months, December through March, account for Precipitation is mostly in the form of rain, but
about 43 percent of the normal annual precipita snow can be expected to some extent each winter
tion. Severely cold weather seldom occurs. and seasonal totals have ranged from less than an
Temperatures average dropping as low as the inch to over 20 inches.
zero point about once per year, usually under
clear skies with only light winds. In the Huntsville area, the average date for the
last occurrence in spring of temperatures as
In the transition from winter to spring, appear low as 32° is March 30, and the average date for
ances of warm/ moist air in place of the cold the first occurrence in the fall of temperatures as
air become more frequent, and the greatest low as 32° is October 31, thus giving a growing
variety of weather usually occurs during this season of 214 days. The climate is suitable for
season. Spring season thunderstorms in the truck farming, as well as for staple crops and
vicinity of the boundary between warm and cold livestock.
airmasses are more likely to be accompanied