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January 1977 is the coldest month on record in the state of Ohio, with an average temperature of 11.9 °F (−11.2 °C). Snowfall was above average throughout the month and the all-time record low of −25 °F (−32 °C) was set in Cincinnati. The Ohio River froze solid for the first time since 1918, halting commercial shipping for weeks.
Green Bay, Wisconsin saw its third-coldest February, with a monthly average temperature of 8 °F (−13 °C) Minneapolis-St. Paul tied its record for the seventh-coldest February, with a monthly average temperature of 8.6 °F (−13.0 °C) Dubuque, Iowa realized its third-coldest February, with a monthly average temperature of 10 °F (−12 °C)
A publication by the Climate System Research Center of the University of Massachusetts Amherst projects that, under the higher emissions scenario where global average temperature increases by 4.0–6.1 °C (7.2–11.0 °F), Cincinnati would experience over 80 days a year with temperatures over 90 °F (32 °C), and 29 days a year over 100 °F ...
There have been 12 past moderate to strong El Niño events between 1950 and 2022.
According to the Farmer's Almanac, plants are affected differently by their type and temperature: Light freeze: 29 to 32 degrees — tender plants are killed. Moderate freeze: 25 to 28 degrees ...
Like most cold waves of the 1970s, temperatures in January dropped to extreme lows. Wind chills across the plains fell to between −70 and −80 °F (−56.7 and −62.2 °C). Severe cold pounded from the Plains states to the Eastern seaboard, where frequent frontal storms caused record snowfall and extreme blizzards, [ 2 ] which caused some ...
Fall is just a few weeks away, but there may still be swaths of 70-degree days into October in Ohio.
A map of the United States detailing the record-low temperatures for various cities on January 21, 1985. The 1985 North America cold wave [1] was a meteorological event which occurred in January 1985 as a result of the shifting of the polar vortex farther south than is normally seen. [1]