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The North American winter of 2017–18 began in the month of November with the highest snow extent in at least one and a half decades, with snow covering over a quarter of the contiguous United States, [4] 22% more than the same date in 2011, the next-most-recent year with comparable snow coverage at that date.
The National Weather Service has upgraded a winter storm watch to a winter storm warning for central and southern Indiana, which is expected to receive up to 8 inches of snow on Sunday. The ...
In mid-January, a damaging ice storm began to form which impacted the Great Plains and American Midwest. [23] On January 13, 2017, one woman from Missouri died while driving in on the icy roads, a National Football League game was postponed, and thousands lost power. [24] Sleet starting falling to the ground on January 23.
In Dodge City, where 1 inch (2.5 cm) of ice accumulated, so many downed trees blocked roads that school buses could not run on January 18. [22] [23] The Kansas National Guard helped stranded motorists and provided emergency transportation on January 13, 2017. On January 14, the storm caused a pileup of 20 vehicles, causing two injuries. [24]
New York City has averaged 8.8 inches in January and 10.1 Inches in February. But there's more to January's Northeast snowfall history than those simple averages.
Winter storms bring heavy snow to parts of the United States each year, but you might be surprised to find out how high the bar is to reach a state's 24-hour snowfall record. ... (2013), Oklahoma ...
The January 4–8, 2017 North American winter storm was a major snow and ice storm that affected the Lower 48 of the United States with winter weather. Moving ashore on the West Coast on January 3, the system produced heavy snowfall in the Sierra Mountains, with nearly 4 feet of snowfall falling in the highest elevations. After impacting the ...
Snowfall totals from northeast Kansas, southeast Nebraska, northern Missouri, south-central Illinois, southern Indiana, northern Kentucky and southern Ohio could see snow totals of 8 or more.