Blowing dust prompts the issuance of the first Dust Storm Warning on record for the Chicago metro area

1-minute daytime GOES-19 True Color RGB images + nighttime Dust RGB images, from 2130 UTC on 16 May to 0200 UTC on 17 May [click to play animated GIF | MP4]
Plots of Wind Barbs and Peak Wind Gusts greater than 50 kts along with Ceiling/Visibility (below) showed the northward progression of strongest winds — which began around 2100-2200 UTC with thunderstorm outflow gusts of 60 kts at Champaign (KCMI), 53 kts at Decatur (KDEC) and 51 kts at Bloomington-Normal (KBMI) — and lower visibility (1/4 mi at KBMI, and later dropping to 1/4 mi at Chicago/Midway KMDW).

Hourly plots of Surface Wind Barbs (white) and Ceiling/Visibility (cyan), along with 30-minute Peak Wind Gusts greater than 50 kts (red)
Plots of 15-minute METAR Surface Reports along with Dust Storm Warning polygons across the greater Chicago area (below) included the first Dust Storm Warning on record that included the Chicago metro area.

Plots of 15-minute METAR Surface Reports, along with Dust Storm Warning polygons (beige) and nearshore Gale Warning polygons (magenta) acoss the greater Chicago area
A cursor sample of the Chicago O’Hare (KORD) METAR Surface Report at 0051 UTC on 17 May (below) listed the unusual combination of a thunderstorm with light rain (-TSRA) and blowing dust (BLDU). Plots of GLM Flash Points at 0045 UTC did show an isolated lighting flash just northwest of KORD.

Cursor sample of the Chicago O’Hare (KORD) METAR Surface Report (cyan) at 0051 UTC, along with GLM Flash Points (white) at 0045 UTC on 17 May [click to enlarge]