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Additionally, this event was the second of three major Mid-Atlantic snowstorms that occurred over a 12-day period; each subsequent storm focused its heaviest snow slightly farther north: the January 30, 2010, storm (not recognized by NESIS) dropped more than a foot of snow across Virginia and the lower Chesapeake Bay region, while the February ...
The February 25–27, 2010 North American blizzard (also known as the "Snowicane") was a winter storm and severe weather event that occurred in the Mid-Atlantic and New England regions of the United States between February 24 and 26, 2010. The storm dropped its heaviest snow of 12 to 24 inches (30 to 61 cm) (locally as much as 36 inches (91 cm ...
The storm brought 10 to 20 inches (25 to 51 cm) of snow across a wide swath from Washington, D.C., to New York City, with parts of the Baltimore metro area receiving more than 20 inches (51 cm). [1] This storm began as a classic " Alberta clipper ", starting out in Canada and then moving southeast, and finally curving northeast while rapidly ...
On Feb. 5, 2010, 15 years ago, the first of back-to-back snowstorms buried the mid-Atlantic in feet of snow, including Washington D.C., Baltimore and Philadelphia.
The 2010–2011 winter featured several significant storms, and one of them was a historic storm. A storm that spawned a devastating tornado outbreak in mid-April was responsible for a late-season blizzard in the Great Plains.
In North Carolina and southern Virginia, significant snowfall and icy conditions were expected by midweek, with some areas, including Norfolk, Virginia, bracing for more than 8 inches of snow and ice.
Interacting with cold air from the west, snow broke out on the western side of the system, stretching from Oklahoma to southern Minnesota. The storm grew to an immense size, stretching from the Gulf Coast to the Upper Midwest, spreading a line of thunderstorms in the Deep South as well late on December 24. The blizzard dumped up to 40 inches ...
A disruptive winter storm will make its way through the Central Plains over the weekend through Monday and bring heavy snow, 8 to 14 inches, with it. Cincinnati, Ohio snow forecast