ALPHABETIC
Allen, J. T., and M. K. Tippett, 2015: The characteristics of United States hail reports: 1955-2014. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 10 (3), 1-31.
Andretta, T. A., 2014: Topographic sensitivity of the Snake River Plain Convergence Zone of eastern Idaho. Part II: Numerical simulations. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 9 (1), 1-33.
Andretta, T. A., and B. Geerts, 2010: Heavy snowfall produced by topographically-induced winds in the Snake River Plain of eastern Idaho. Part I: Observational analysis. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 5 (3), 1-33.
Baerg, B. M., W. P. Gargan, A. E. Cohen, R. L. Thompson, B. T. Smith, A. P. Gerard, C. J. Schultz, L. A. Kelly, and H. V. Nepaul, 2020: Radar-based, storm-scale circulation and tornado-probability tendencies preceding tornadogenesis in Kansas and Nebraska. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 15 (3), 1-23.
Banacos, P. C., M. L. Ekster, J. W. Dellicarpini, and E. J. Lyons, 2012: A multiscale analysis of the 1 June 2011 northeast U.S. severe weather outbreak and associated Springfield, Massachusetts tornado. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 7 (7), 1-40.
Beatty, K., E. N. Rasmussen, J. M. Straka, and L. R. Lemon, 2009: The supercell spectrum. Part II: A semi-objective method for radar classification of supercell type. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 4 (1), 1-30.
Beatty, K., E. N. Rasmussen, and J. M. Straka, 2008: The supercell spectrum. Part I: A review of research related to supercell precipitation morphology. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 3 (4), 1-21.
Bentley, E. S., and J. Logsdon, 2016: An examination of the mesoscale environment and evolution of the northern Indiana/northwest Ohio derecho of 29 June 2012. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 11 (1), 1-25.
Beveridge, S. L., J. L. Houser, and S. R. Marzola, 2019: A statistical evaluation of tornado-production tendencies of southernmost supercells compared to adjacent supercells in a north-south-oriented line. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 14 (1), 1-33.
Blair, S. F., D. R. Deroche, J. M. Boustead, J. W. Leighton, B. L. Barjenbruch, and W. P. Gargan, 2011: A radar-based assessment of the detectability of giant hail. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 6 (7), 1-30.
Blair, S. F., and E. P. K. Lunde, 2010: Tornadoes impacting Interstates: Service and societal considerations. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 5 (4), 1-16.
Blair, S. F., D. R. Deroche, and A. E. Pietrycha, 2008: In situ observations of the 21 April 2007 Tulia, Texas tornado. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 3 (3), 1-27.
Bunkers, M. J., and J. W. Stoppkotte, 2007: Documentation of a rare tornadic left-moving supercell. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 2 (2), 1-22.
Carlaw, L. B., J. A. Brotzge, and F. H. Carr, 2015: Investigating the impacts of assimilating surface observations on high-resolution forecasts of the 15 May 2013 tornado event. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 10 (2), 1-34.
Carroll-Smith, D. L., L. C. Dawson, and R. J. Trapp, 2019: High-resolution real-data WRF modeling and verification of tropical cyclone tornadoes associated with Hurricane Ivan (2004). Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 14 (2), 1-36.
Coffer, B. E., 2014: Would "tornado-preventing" walls work? Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 9 (4), 1-13.
Coleman, T. A., K. R. Knupp, J. P. Dice, K. Laws, and C. Darden, 2019: The Birmingham, Alabama snow "disaster" of 28 January 2014. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 14 (4), 1-24.
Coleman, T. A., A. W. Lyza, K. R. Knupp, K. Laws, and W. Wyatt, 2018: A significant tornado in a heterogeneous environment during VORTEX-SE. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 13 (2), 1-25.
Coleman, T. A., K. R. Knupp, an P. T. Pangle, 2021: The effects of heterogeneous surface roughness on boundary-layer kinematics and wind shear. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 16 (3), 1–29.
Davies, J. M., 2017: Meteorological setting for a catastrophic event: The deadly Joplin tornado of 22 May 2011. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 12 (3), 1-23.
Dean, L. E., D. R. Moran, R. D. Hicks, and P. T. Winn, 2024: pressure measurements and video observations near and inside three EF2 tornadoes. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor.,19(2), 1–45.
Dean, L. E., D. R. Moran, and R. D. Hicks, 2022: In-situ video observations and analysis of the 16 June 2014 Pilger, Nebraska EF4 west tornado. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 17 (3), 1–28.
Dostalek, J. F., L. D. Grasso, Y.-J. Noh, T.-C Wu, J. W. Zeitler, H. G. Weinman, A. E. Cohen., and D. T. Lindsey, 2021: Using GOES ABI split-window radiances to retrieve daytime low-level water vapor for convective forecasting. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 16 (2), 1-19.
Doswell, C. A. III, 2007: Historical overview of severe convective storms research. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 2 (1), 1-25.
Doswell, C. A. III, 2007: Small sample size and data quality issues illustrated using tornado occurrence data. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 2 (5), 1-16.
Doswell, C. A. III, and M. J. Haugland, 2007: A comparison of two cold fronts - Effects of the planetary boundary layer on the mesoscale. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 2 (4), 1-12.
Doswell, C. A. III, and D. M. Schultz, 2006: On the use of indices and parameters in forecasting severe storms. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 1 (3), 1-22.
Dunn, J., and T. Best, 2011: Bow echo and mesovortex evolution during the 2 May 2007 North Texas derecho. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 6 (4), 1-25.
Edwards, R., 2012: Tropical cyclone tornadoes: A review of knowledge in research and prediction. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 7 (6), 1-61.
Edwards, R., and D. M. Schultz, 2006: Editorial: Introducing EJSSM. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 1 (1), 1-2.
Esterheld, J. M. and D. J. Giuliano, 2008: Discriminating between tornadic and non-tornadic supercells: A new hodograph technique. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 3 (2), 1-50.
Finch, J. D., and D. Bikos, 2012: Russian tornado outbreak of 9 June 1984. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 7 (4), 1-28.
Finch, J. D., and D. Bikos, 2010: A long-lived tornadic supercell over Colorado and Wyoming, 22 May 2008. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 5 (5), 1-27.
Frelich, L. E., and E. J. Ostuno, 2012: Estimating wind speeds of convective storms from tree damage. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 7 (9), 1-19.
Garner, J. M., 2012: Environments of significant tornadoes occurring within the warm sector versus those occurring along surface baroclinic boundaries. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 7 (5), 1-28.
Garner, J. M., 2013: A study of synoptic-scale tornado regimes. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 8 (3), 1-25.
Geerts, B., T. Andretta, S. J. Luberda, J. Vogt, Y. Wang, L. D. Oolman, J. Finch and D. Bikos, 2009: A case study of a long-lived tornadic mesocyclone in a low-CAPE complex-terrain environment. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 4 (3), 1-29.
Gensini, V. A., and W. L. Ashley, 2011: Climatology of potentially severe convective environments from the North American regional reanalysis. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 6 (8), 1-40.
Grasso, L., and Coauthors, 2020: Application of the GOES-16 Advanced Baseline Imager: Morphology of a preconvective environment on 17 April 2019. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 15 (2), 1-24.
Gunter, W. S., and Q. M. Long, 2024: A mesonet-based climatology of severe convective winds in west Texas. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 19 (1), 1–30.
Hodanish, S. J., E. Williams, and B. Boldi, 2013: Early history of using total lightning data at NWS Melbourne, Florida. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 8 (6), 1-26.
Houston, A. L., 2016: The sensitivity of deep ascent of cold-pool air to vertical shear and cold-pool buoyancy. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 11 (3), 1-29.
Johns, R. H., D. W. Burgess, C. A. Doswell III, M. S. Gilmore, J. A. Hart, and S. F. Piltz, 2013: The 1925 Tri-State tornado damage path and associated storm system. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 8 (2), 1-33.
Johnson, A. W., and K. E. Sugden, 2014: Evaluation of sounding-derived thermodynamic and wind-related parameters associated with large hail events. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 9 (5), 1-42.
Kanak, K. M., and J. M. Straka, 2023: Observational study of two Norman, Oklahoma storms with very large, damaging hail in long-hodograph environments. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 18 (1), 1–41.
Kennedy, A. D., E. N. Rasmussen, and J. M. Straka, 2007: A visual observation of the 6 June 2005 descending reflectivity core. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 2 (6), 1-12.
Klepatski, J. P., and S. M. Milrad, 2020: Composite Analysis of Cool-Season Florida Tornado Outbreaks. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 15 (1), 1-34.
Kumjian, M. R., 2011: Precipitation properties of supercell hook echoes. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 6 (5), 1-21.
Kuster, C. M., P. Burke, and A. A. Taylor, 2012: An 11-year radar-based study of tornadic thunderstorms over central Oklahoma. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 7 (8), 1-18.
Laflin J. M., and A. L. Houston, 2012: A modeling study of supercell development in the presence of a preexisting airmass boundary. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 7 (1), 1-29.
Lakshmanan, V., 2012: Image processing of weather radar reflectivity data: Should it be done in Z or dBZ?. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 7 (3), 1-8.
Lanicci, J. M., 2016: A multi-scale analysis of the atmospheric conditions associated with the Daytona Beach tornado of Christmas Day 2006. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 11 (5), 1-44.
Lewis, J. M., S. Lakshmivarahan, J. Hu, and R. Rabin, 2020: Placement of observations to correct return flow forecasts. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 15 (4), 1-20.
Lewis, J. M., S. Lakshmivarahan, J. Hu, R. Edwards, R. A. Maddox, R. L. Thompson, and S. F. Corfidi, 2016: Ensemble forecasting of return flow over the Gulf of Mexico. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 11 (4), 1-26.
Lewis, J. M., 2007: A forecaster's story: Robert H. Johns. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 2 (7), 1-19.
Lindley, T. T., G. P. Murdoch, J. L. Guyer, G. D. Skwira, K. J. Schneider, S. R. Nagle, K. M. Van Speybroeck, B. R. Smith, and M.-J. Beierle, 2014: Southern Great Plains wildfire outbreaks. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 9 (2), 1-43.
Lindley, T. T., J. D. Vitale, W. S. Burgett, and M.-J. Beierle, 2011: Proximity meteorological observations for wind-driven grassland wildfire starts on the southern High Plains. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 6 (1), 1-27.
Lindley, T. T., and L. R. Lemon, 2007: Preliminary observations of weak three-body scatter spikes associated with low-end severe hail. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 2 (3), 1-15.
Lyza, A. W., R. Castro, E. Lenning, M. T. Friedlein, B. S. Borchardt, A. W. Clayton, and K. R. Knupp, 2019: A multi-platform reanalysis of the Kankakee Valley tornado cluster on 30 June 2014. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 14 (3), 1-64.
Lyza, A. W., R. Castro, E. Lenning, M. T. Friedlein, B. S. Borchardt, A. W. Clayton, and K. R. Knupp, 2017: Analysis of mesovortex characteristics, behavior, and interactions during the second 30 June-1 July 2014 midwestern derecho event. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 12 (2), 1-33.
Maddox, R. A., M. S. Gilmore, C. A. Doswell III, R. H. Johns, C. A. Crisp, D. W. Burgess, J. A. Hart, and S. F. Piltz, 2013: Meteorological analyses of the Tri-State tornado event of March 1925. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 8 (1), 1-27.
Markowski, P., M. Majcen, Y. Richardson, J. Marquis, and J. Wurman, 2011: Characteristics of the wind field in a trio of nontornadic low-level mesocyclones observed by the Doppler on Wheels radars. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 6 (3), 1-48.
McKinney, C. M., L. D. Carey, and G. R. Patrick, 2008: Total lightning observations of supercells over north central Texas. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 4 (2), 1-25.
Mead, C. M., and R. L. Thompson, 2011: Environmental characteristics associated with nocturnal significant-tornado events in the central and southern Great Plains. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 6 (6), 1-35.
Milrad, S. M., and C. M. Kelly, 2013: Synoptic-scale precursors, characteristics and typing of nocturnal mesoscale convective complexes in the Great Plains. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 8 (4), 1-59.
Monteverdi, J. P., and R. Edwards, 2010: The redevelopment of a warm-core structure in Erin: A case of inland tropical storm formation. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 5 (6), 1-18.
Morris, M. T., K. A. Brewster, and F. H. Carr, 2021: Assessing the impact of non-conventional radar and surface observations on high-resolution analyses and forecasts of a severe hailstorm. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 16 (1), 1-39.
Obermeier, H. M. and M. R. Anderson, 2015: Verification and analysis of impact-based tornado warnings in the Central Region of the National Weather Service. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 10 (1), 1-20.
Ortega, K. L., 2018: Evaluating multi-radar, multi-sensor products for surface hail-fall diagnosis. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 13 (1), 1-36.
Ostuno, E. J., 2008: A case study in forensic meteorology: Investigating the 3 April 1956 tornadoes in southwest Lower Michigan. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 3 (1), 1-33.
Rigo, T., and N. Pineda, 2016: Inferring the severity of a multicell thunderstorm evolving to supercell, by means of radar and total lightning. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 11 (2), 1-27.
Schultz, D. M., 2010: How to research and write effective case studies in meteorology. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 5 (2), 1-18.
Shafer, C., and C. A. Doswell III, 2011: Using kernel density estimation to identify, rank, and classify severe weather outbreak events. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 6 (2), 1-28.
Shafer, C., C. A. Doswell III, L. M. Leslie, and M. B. Richman, 2010: On the use of areal coverage of parameters favorable for severe weather to discriminate major outbreaks. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 5 (7), 1-44.
Shafer, C., and C. A. Doswell III, 2010: A multivariate index for ranking and classifying severe weather outbreaks. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 5 (1), 1-39.
Spoden, P. J., R. A. Wolf, and L. R. Lemon, 2012: Operational uses of spectrum width. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 7 (2), 1-28.
Straka, J. M. and K. M. Kanak, 2022: A climatology of long-track tornadoes. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 17 (1), 1–49.
Straka, J. M., E. N. Rasmussen, R. P. Davies-Jones, and P. M. Markowski, 2007: An observational and idealized numerical examination of low-level counter-rotating vortices in the rear flank of supercells. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 2 (8), 1-22.
Thompson, R. L., B. T. Smith, A. R. Dean, and P. T. Marsh, 2013: Spatial distributions of tornadic near-storm environments by convective mode. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 8 (5), 1-22.
Umscheid, M. E., J. P. Monteverdi, and J. M. Davies, 2006: Photographs and analysis of an unusually large and long-lived firewhirl. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 1 (2), 1-13.
Van Den Broeke, M. S., 2014: Effects of mid- and upper-level dry layers on microphysics of simulated supercell storms. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 9 (3), 1-29.
Widen, H. M., and Coauthors, 2013: Adjusted tornado probabilities. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 8 (7), 1-12.
Wilson, M. B., and M. S. Van Den Broeke, 2021: Using the Supercell Polarimetric Observation Research Kit (SPORK) to examine a large sample of pretornadic and nontornadic supercells. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 17 (2), 1–38.
Zenoble, M. D., and C. J. Peterson, 2017: Remotely visible width and discontinuity of 50 tornado damage paths through forested landscapes. Electronic J. Severe Storms Meteor., 12 (1), 1-21.
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