Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 2012–13 North American winter was the most active winter weather season by metric of the amount of storms rated on the Regional Snowfall Index (RSI), with a record-breaking 21 storms being rated on the scale.
The December 17–22, 2012 North American blizzard [8] [9] [10] was a winter storm that affected the Midwestern and Eastern United States. [5] Forming on December 17, the winter storm moved across the midwest, forcing schools to close throughout the region. [ 3 ]
Using data from The National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center (NOHRSC), snow depth totals are plotted for the U.S. as of December 27, 2012. The NOHRSC uses high-resolution satellite, radar, in-situ, and reconnaissance data to provide highly detailed snow analyses for the U.S. Snow totals in Canada are not shown.
USA TODAY's detailed map lets you explore snowfall accumulation over the past 24, 48, and 72 hours. You can also check seasonal totals starting from Oct. 1. Updated multiple times daily, this tool ...
Here's how we compiled the list: We pored through 30-year average snowfall statistics of hundreds of locations in the U.S. from 1991 through 2020. We considered only those towns and cities with a ...
As the day progressed, the system brought snow into the Great Lakes region, and a new low pressure center began to develop in North Carolina. [19] Environment Canada also reported that the system began impacting Ontario that day, bringing heavy snow to the province. [ 20 ]
A deadly winter storm that swept across much of the nation at the end of last week is now impacting the mid-Atlantic, where cities like Washington, Baltimore and Richmond, Virginia, brace for ...
Snow over North America on October 30. At the time of the storm, trees across much of the affected area had not yet lost their leaves, [6] and as a result, the storm managed to down as many as many as a thousand trees in New York City's Central Park alone, which observed only its fourth snowy October day since records began 135 years earlier.