Abstract

Abstract The career of severe storm forecaster and teacher Colonel Robert Miller (1920–98) is historicallyreviewed and evaluated. His pathway to the position of recognized authority in severe storm forecasting is examined in light of his early education at Occidental College, his experiences as a weather officer in the Pacific Theatre during World War II (WWII), and his part in the bold and successful tornado forecast at Tinker Air Force Base in 1948. We pay particular attention to Miller's development of a three dimensional view of the severe storm environment in the precomputer age of the late 1940's–a viewpoint that remains central to current operational practice. This conceptual view led Miller and commander Ernest Fawbush to establish empirical criteria/rules that became the foundation of operational prediction at the military's Severe Weather Warning Center (SWWC). The success at the SWWC placed pressure on its civilian counterpart, the Severe Weather Unit (SWU) [laterrenamed the Severe Local Storms...

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