Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Map showing the snowbelts around the Great Lakes of North America with 150 cm (60 in) accumulations or more during winter. The Snowbelt, Snow Belt, Frostbelt, or Frost Belt [1] is the region near the Great Lakes in North America where heavy snowfall in the form of lake-effect snow is particularly common. [2]
Snow will still fly this weekend in the snow belt regions of the Great Lakes: "The persistent flow of arctic (air) over the relatively warm waters of the Great Lakes has continued to bring lake ...
In addition, Burt said the snow belts around the Great Lakes that get the most eye-popping snowfalls tend to be not right on the lakeshores, but rather places inland 20 or so miles, where hills ...
All three are in the traditional lake-effect snow belts, with cold winds from the west moving across the relatively warm Great Lakes, ... have fallen in the Cascade Mountains of the state of ...
Lake effect snow bands over Central New York Map showing some of the lake-effect snow areas of the United States. Cold winds in the winter typically prevail from the northwest in the Great Lakes region, producing the most dramatic lake-effect snowfalls on the southern and eastern shores of the Great Lakes. This lake effect results in much ...
Snow Belt, areas around the Great Lakes prone to lake-effect snow and cold weather; Stroke Belt, a region in the Southeast that has an unusually high incidence of stroke and other forms of cardiovascular disease; Sun Belt, southern, hot-weather states stretching from coast to coast
The most significant snow is in the Great Lakes snowbelts, but we've seen some snowfall reach as far east as the Interstate 95 corridor in New England this morning. That includes the Boston ...
In the snow belt near the Great Lakes, where places such as Erie, Pennsylvania, and Fort Drum, New York, have seen multiple feet of snow since Thanksgiving, another foot of snow could arrive by ...