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While the lower 48 set a new all-time low sea-level pressure record Tuesday afternoon (955
mb at Bigfoot, MN), the first mega-storm of the season bombed out in the far western Bering Sea. The analysis from the Ocean Prediction Center at
NCEP (right) had a minimum pressure of 948
mb at 4pm
ADT Tuesday.
Environment Canada analyzed a minimum pressure of 954
mb at 10pm
ADT. Unlike the upper Midwest, there was no observation especially close to the center. The closest Russian site,
Nikol'Skoe (
WMO station 32618), offshore of the Kamchatka Peninsula, did report a sea-level pressure of 954.2
mb with 25kt sustain west wind at 10am
ADT Tuesday. This certainly supports a central pressure into the upper 940s.
The strung-out occlusion has ramped up the winds in western Alaska, with gusts (through 10am
ADT) to 51 mph at
Scammon Bay and 49 mph at
Gambell. It's too warm though for the first blizzard of the season, with temperatures already above freezing.