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Dec. 1—WATERTOWN — Winter weather arrived this weekend with some areas seeing multiple feet of snow. Data from the National Weather Service in Buffalo at around 1 p.m. Sunday showed that 46 ...
The snow total on December 23 also broke a daily record. [9] To the north, Niagara Falls received 18.9 inches (48 cm) of snowfall over the period. [1] Buffalo experienced zero visibility/complete whiteout conditions from 9 a.m. on December 23 until 1 a.m. on December 25 and again from 5 a.m. until 7 a.m. on December 26. [10]
Oswego, Jefferson, Lewis: 3 to 4 feet of snow. The greatest snow accumulations are expected across the northern Tug Hill region to areas just south and east of Watertown. Allegany: 8 to 14 inches ...
On February 12, 2007, the National Weather Service reported on "tremendous" snowfall totals in the Tug Hill region that accumulated between February 3–12. During that ten-day period, the hamlet of Redfield received 141 inches (11.8 ft; 3.6 m) of snow, the village of Parish received 121 inches (10.1 ft; 3.1 m) of snow, and the hamlet of North ...
NY snowfall totals by region. Chautauqua and Cattaraugus counties: Total snow accumulations of 10 to 20 inches of snow is possible in the most persistent lake effect snow bands.
The Watertown region received 8 to 12 in (20 to 30 cm) of snow with the cold front, but unfrozen Lake Ontario (in contrast to frozen Lake Erie), along with atmospheric conditions favorable for lake effect snow, allowed snow bands to form that resulted in storm totals of 66 in (168 cm) in Watertown, 72.5 in (184.2 cm) in Mansville, 93 in (236 cm ...
Several communities across the Great Lakes region are preparing to be blasted by feet of snow as winter weather moves in just as millions of people across the U.S. ring in 2025.
Weather stations with highest snowfall in the United States by state, 1985-2015; State Place Average annual snowfall [3] elevation of weather station [4] coordinates [4] Other snowy areas (limited or unofficial data) and notes 1. Washington: Paradise, Mount Rainier: 645.5 inches (1,640 cm) 5,400 feet (1,600 m)