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After a warm and comfortable start to the month, Mother Nature has remembered that February is actually a winter month. Cold air will flood the Central and Eastern United States this week.
The second has to do with meteorological winter which varies with latitude for a start date. [1] Winter is often defined by meteorologists to be the three calendar months with the lowest average temperatures. Since both definitions span the start of the calendar year, it is possible to have a winter storm occur two different years.
January is the first month of the year in the Julian and Gregorian calendars.Its length is 31 days. The first day of the month is known as New Year's Day.It is, on average, the coldest month of the year within most of the Northern Hemisphere (where it is the second month of winter) and the warmest month of the year within most of the Southern Hemisphere (where it is the second month of summer).
The 2024–25 North American winter is the current winter season that is ongoing across the continent of North America.The most notable events of the season so far have included a powerful bomb cyclone that impacted the West Coast of the United States in mid-to-late November, as well as a severe lake-effect snowstorm in the Great Lakes later that month.
ARLINGTON, Va. − Two storms forecast to develop this week could slam the Midwest and East with paralyzing snow and ice and including a big blast to the nation's capital. The first storm ...
However, this meteorological winter was the 19th-warmest of the past 120 winters over the Contiguous United States, largely due to persistent warm weather in the Western United States. [5] During the 2014–15 winter season, Boston broke its all-time official seasonal 107.6-inch (2.73-meter) snowfall record from the winter of 1995–96, with a ...
Western United States, Central United States, Ohio Valley, Mid-Atlantic states, Northeastern United States, Southeastern United States, Eastern Canada: $1.85 billion 7 Super Bowl Sunday nor'easter: February 6 – 8 N/A N/A N/A 960 20 (50) N/A Mid-Atlantic states, Northeastern United States, Atlantic Canada, Southern Greenland, Iceland: Unknown 1
The following week around January 12–13, a major winter storm affected much of the Appalachian Mountains and interior New England, [12] and a few days later on January 16, a separate system dumped as much as 12 inches (30 cm) in areas of North Carolina, and for the second time in a month brought snowfall to areas of the Florida Panhandle. [13]