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2024–25. The 2023–24 North American winter was the warmest winter on record across the contiguous United States, with below-average snowfall primarily in the Upper Midwest and parts of the Northeastern United States. However, some areas, especially in the states of Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York saw considerably more snow than the ...
2023–24. The 2022–23 North American winter was an unusually warm winter for the east and an unusually cold winter for the west in North America, as it occurred across the continent from late 2022 to early 2023. The winter season in North America began at the winter solstice, which occurred on December 21, 2022, and it ended at the March ...
Power outages. >320,000. Part of the 2022–23 North American winter. A winter storm in March 2023 impacted much of the Western, Northern, and Northeastern United States, producing high snowfall totals and widespread damage across the region. The winter storm, unofficially named Winter Storm Sage by The Weather Channel, first progressed across ...
October 26, 2023 at 7:21 AM. ... • AccuWeather is predicting 20-30 inches of snow in Chicago this winter, only slightly above last year's total of 20.2 inches. Additionally, accumulating snow is ...
The most snow Chicago has ever received in one season was 89.7 inches during 1978-79. The least — 9.8 inches — occurred in 1920-21. Here’s a look back at how our current snowfall compares ...
Seasonal snowfall totals through March 1 at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport. Overall, 17.9 inches of snow has fallen so far this season at O'Hare, which is well below the historical average ...
7.47 million [4][5] Part of the 2022–23 North American winter. From December 21 to 26, 2022, an extratropical cyclone created crippling winter storm conditions, including blizzards, high winds, snowfall, and record cold temperatures across the majority of the United States and parts of Canada. Impacted areas include parts of Minnesota, Iowa ...
December 25–26: 26.4 inches (67 cm) — Blizzard Category 3 1950 November 24–30: 57 inches (140 cm) 978 hPa (28.9 inHg) Blizzard Category 5 1952 February 17–18 — — Storm — 1956 March 18–19 — — Blizzard — 1958 March 18–21 — — Storm Category 3 1960 December 11–12: 21.4 inches (54 cm) 966 hPa (28.5 inHg) Blizzard ...