Over 50% of the USA is now covered in snow

UPDATE: The East coast snowstorm seen from space

Snow storm buries the U.S. East Coast
Image: NASA Earth Observatory - click for hi-res version

The Mid-Atlantic states were completely white on Sunday, December 20, 2009, in the wake of a record-breaking snow storm. The storm deposited between 12 and 30 inches of snow in Virginia, Maryland, and Washington, D.C. on December 19, according to the National Weather Service. For many locations, the snowfall totals broke records for the most snow to fall in a single December day.

The storm shut down the federal government in Washington DC, stranded travelers, left hundreds of thousands without power and sharply cut holiday sales the weekend before Christmas.

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From the “weather is not climate” department here’s interesting news from the National Operational Hyrdologic Remote Sensing Center. While certainly not unprecedented or unusual, it is interesting, especially when comparing years past:

Indeed, it looks like a white Christmas for much of the USA. Here’s the data:

December 21, 2009

Area Covered By Snow: 51.7%
Area Covered Last Month: 8.0%
Snow Depth
Average: 3.8 in
Minimum: 0.0 in
Maximum: 887.0 in
Std. Dev.: 6.4 in
Snow Water Equivalent
Average: 0.7 in
Minimum: 0.0 in
Maximum: 435.0 in
Std. Dev.: 1.4 in

Their weather summary indicates more snow on the way:

One to 3 feet of snow fell in the western Plains yesterday, while up to 1/2 inch of freezing rain fell in the central Plains. The precipitation was in response to a potent upper low in the Southern Plains and an associated surface low, which caused upslope flow conditions. The heaviest snowfall amounts were observed in the Colorado Front Range and in the Sangre de Cristo mountains of New Mexico. Strong surface winds in these areas caused much blowing and drifting snow.

Most of the snowpack across the West and western Plains is cool, with cold conditions at the lower elevations of the Great Basin. In the central Plains, where rain and snow fell yesterday, the snowpack there is warm, but snowmelt occurred along the southeastern edge of the central U.S. snowpack. Very warm conditions exist on the windward side of the Cascades where warm onshore flow occurred yesterday; slow snowmelt occurred there. Strong surface winds caused high blowing snow sublimation in the Western Plains from southeastern Wyoming and the Nebraska panhandle southward to northeastern New Mexico.

The upper low, currently over the Central Plains, will move slowly northeastward during the next three days, passing through the Great Lakes region by Sunday. A surface low will accompany the system. Little additional deepening of the system is expected since it appears that dry air is wrapping around the system. But on the cold side of the low, about 1/2 foot of snowfall is expected today in northeastern Colorado through southwestern Minnesota today. Heavier amounts are expected in orographically-favored areas of the Western Plains and northern Front Range. Snowfall is expected in the eastern part of the Upper Midwest and south of western Lake Superior. Up to 1/2 foot of snowfall is possible in this band with higher amounts snowfall likely in northwestern Wisconsin and the Michigan Upper Peninsula.

A deep surface low just off the central British Columbia coast has a cold front extending southward through the Northwest. Onshore flow behind the cold front and midlevel dynamics associated with the front will bring up to a foot of snowfall to the Cascades, Intermountains, Northern Rockies, and northern Sierra Nevada today and from northwestern Wyoming through southern Utah tomorrow. Another front will bring 4 to 8 inches of snow to the Cascades on Saturday.


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Gail Combs
December 22, 2009 8:55 am

tty (01:48:42) :
“…By the way that talk about an Ice Age starting from one year to another doesn’t hold. It’s a fairly quick process, yes, but it takes a few centuries. If it was more or less instantaneous there wouldn’t be any arctic plants or animals since they would have been snowed over and gone extinct long ago.
The process at the end of previous interglacial has been pretty thoroughly studied.”

Some do not agree with that statement
“Evidence for abrupt climate change is readily apparent in ice cores taken from Greenland and Antarctica. One sees clear indications of long-term changes discussed above, with CO² and proxy temperature changes associated with the last ice age and its transition into our present interglacial period of warmth. But, in addition, there is a strong chaotic variation of properties with a quasi-period of around 1500 years. We say chaotic because these millennial shifts look like anything but regular oscillations. Rather, they look like rapid, decade-long transitions between cold and warm climates followed by long interludes in one of the two states.” Terrence Joyce, Senior Scientist, Physical Oceanography and Lloyd Keigwin, Senior Scientist, Geology & Geophysics (Wood Hole)
http://www.whoi.edu/page.do?pid=12455&tid=282&cid=10046

December 22, 2009 12:47 pm

You can give it all to us. Why the hell does the east coast need snow? Give it to us here in Summit County Colorado!!! We have NO SNOW!!!! Sheesh!!!

Glenn
December 22, 2009 3:18 pm

Bonnie (08:01:40) :
“People, this is called Winter. Remember?”
Actually, this is called unusual and record breaking climatic events.

Al Gore
December 22, 2009 7:12 pm

Uh oh . . . .

Glenn
December 22, 2009 7:23 pm

Al Gore (19:12:49) :
“Uh oh . . . .”
Are you the big banana? If so I just wanted to say “Hey!”

Glenn
December 22, 2009 9:17 pm

f8te (12:47:04) :
“You can give it all to us. Why the hell does the east coast need snow? Give it to us here in Summit County Colorado!!! We have NO SNOW!!!! Sheesh!!!”
Digging out and can’t report the good news?
http://weather.msn.com/local.aspx?wealocations=wc:USCO0040&q=Breckenridge%2c+CO
“AREAS OF LIGHT SNOW WILL CONTINUE TO SPREAD NORTHWARD OVER THE NORTH CENTRAL MOUNTAINS AND HIGH VALLEYS THROUGH 10 PM. INITIAL SNOWFALL RATES WILL MOST LIKELY BE UNDER A QUARTER INCH PER HOUR… BUT AS THE EVENING GOES ON MOUNTAIN AREAS SOUTH OF INTERSTATE 70 MAY SEE SNOWFALL RATES APPROACHING AN INCH PER HOUR.”

Glenn
December 23, 2009 12:13 am

Holiday travelers, plan carefully and think twice, please. This looks serious. I’ve canceled my road trip between Xmas and NY due to the forecast in northern Arizona/New Mexico. My roof almost blew off the house yesterday, and three died in a high wind dust storm accident.
“This is a life-threatening system,” the National Weather Service warned, “and any travel from Wednesday night into Friday will be treacherous.”
“The storm is said to be a “once in a quarter century storm,” and will move onto the plains Wednesday, intensifying into Thursday. Wind gusts of up to 30 to 40 miles per hour and 10 to 20 inches of snow are expected, along with freezing rain.”
http://www.dglobe.com/event/article/id/30897/group/News/

WakeUpMaggy
December 23, 2009 6:04 am

“Their weather summary indicates more snow on the way:………………………………………………”
I guess you mods never removed the text portion of this article which is just false for the dates, 2006 others have said………was that the great Denver snowstorm of a few years back?

Wait long enough and it becomes current.
C’mon, this site has to be accurate. Just remove the whole four paragraphs.

les Johnson
December 24, 2009 2:09 pm

It might be a little rarer than once very 25 years.
My brother just called from Tulsa, and he says the radio is declaring this the first blizzard in Tulsa’s history….

Nigel Alcazar
January 8, 2010 9:34 am

Strange how we are having it really cold all over the nothern hemisphear and the thing that drives our planets weather i.e.the sun has zero sunspot activity.
Time these so called experts stopped trying to make the facts fit what they want to believe.
The only thing we need to realise is overall a warmer planet is better than a colder one because if it’s all ice we wont be eating well.Only a small fall in temperture will cause the ice caps and winter ice to expand hugely.

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