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Snowmageddon, Snowpocalypse, and Snowzilla are portmanteaus of the word "snow" with "Armageddon", "Apocalypse", and "Godzilla" respectively. Snowmageddon and Snowpocalypse were used in the popular press in Canada during January 2009, [ 1 ] and was also used in January 2010 by The Guardian reporter Charlie Brooker to characterise the ...
The February 5–6, 2010 North American blizzard, commonly referred to as Snowmageddon, [1] was a blizzard that had major and widespread impact in the Northeastern United States. The storm's center tracked from Baja California Sur on February 2, 2010, to the east coast on February 6, 2010, before heading east out into the Atlantic.
The February 13–17, 2021 North American winter storm was a crippling winter and ice storm that had widespread impacts across the United States, Northern Mexico, and parts of Canada from February 13 to 17, 2021.
The first "Snowmageddon" or "Snowpocalypse" snowstorm, as it was dubbed in social media, dumped over 20 inches of snow in many areas from southern Pennsylvania, northeastern West Virginia and ...
List of highest snowfall accumulations by state during the 2009 blizzard (Snowpocalypse) State Location Amount Connecticut Clinton, East Haddam, Norwich, Putnam: 20.0 in (51 cm) Washington, D.C. American University, The Mall: 16.0 in (41 cm) Delaware Dover: 18.0 in (46 cm) Kentucky Harlan: 7.0 in (18 cm) Maine Hampstead: 5.4 in (14 cm) Maryland
Depending on the availability of cold air, a large portion of the precipitation can fall in frozen form, giving rise to terms such as "snowmageddon" and "snowpocalypse" to describe these intense ...
The February 9–10, 2010 North American blizzard was a winter and severe weather event that afflicted the Midwest, Mid-Atlantic and New England regions of the United States between February 9–11, 2010, affecting some of the same regions that had experienced a historic Nor'easter just three days earlier.
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