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Marine Thunderstorm Wind — Southern Lynn Canal, Gulf of Alaska

2024-06-04 · near Point Retreat, Southern Lynn Canal, Gulf of Alaska

34 EG
Magnitude

Event narrative

The ferry M/V Kennicott measured a peak gust of 38kt at 238pm shortly after it exited Southern Lynn Canal and the storm was tracking northward into Southern Lynn Canal. Wind gusts estimated based on several continued lightning strikes with the cell and subsequent webcam imagery of a shelf cloud at the leading edge of the wind shift after it moved into Northern Lynn Canal.

Wider weather episode

Large sunny breaks opened up over the northern inner channels of SE Alaska mid morning on June 4th. To the north and to the south there were frontal bands passing overhead due to low pressure in the Gulf of Alaska. Light northerly winds were observed ahead of a frontal band, then the sunny breaks allowed for larger build-ups to form quickly as the band tracked northward across Chichagof and Admiralty Islands. The first lightning strikes were detected on Chichagof Island, west of Hoonah, at around 1245pm AKDT. This thunderstorm cell then tracked northward across Icy Strait and into Gustavus and Glacier Bay. Another thunderstorm cell saw it's first strikes at the NE corner Admiralty Island near Taku Inlet at about 115pm. This storm then tracked northward across the Juneau area, then through Favorite Channel and Southern Lynn Canal. The storm weakened as it progressed northward with the last lightning strikes detected in Berners Bay at about 315pm. The southerly wind shift with this frontal band produced peak gusts of 20 to 40 knots and distinct shelf clouds observed by webcams and spotters.

View location on OpenStreetMap → (58.5315, -134.9302)


Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 1171023. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.