There was 1.3 cm (about 1/2 inch )of snow in Las Vegas today, the first time since 1937


NWS Las Vegas writes:
The Las Vegas Valley Snow Event: What happened? Did we see this coming? Yes and no. We had been seeing very small chances for snow in the valley for a few days, but it wasn’t until Sunday afternoon that the hi-resolution models were consistently indicating that western parts of the valley could see up to 3 inches and up to an inch elsewhere. That’s when the decision was made to issue the Winter Weather Advisory.
This is uncommon for the models but it happens, and for a number of different reasons, models often overdo the snowfall in the valley. This can be because models struggle with the very dry desert climate in the low levels of the atmosphere, they can have a difficult time because snow levels can fluctuate up and down depending on which direction the wind is originating from, or they can just completely miss some things. The models aren’t perfect, and they are one of the most important guides we have for making a forecast.
Loop of KESX radar from 12PM Sunday – 4AM Monday


Why did some parts of the valley get snow but others didn’t? Surface temperatures, snow levels, and the intensity of the precipitation coming down. All three of these things complicated the forecast and thus, what ended up happening. Surface temperatures in the valley were above freezing much of the night, but the temperatures were much closer to freezing in the west side of the valley where elevations are a bit higher. Also, the temperatures were fluctuating up and down a few degrees resulting in rain, then snow, then back to rain in some cases. This happens often when heavier precipitation falls. The atmosphere is trying to evaporate the precipitation as it falls, and this cools the atmosphere to its wet bulb temperature.
This is known as the wet-bulb effect and while we can approximate the potential of this effect, it’s notoriously difficult to accurately forecast. Temperatures can fall over 10 degrees in an hour depending on the intensity of the precipitation. So while most areas were above freezing, where the more intense precipitation developed was where accumulations occurred.
These areas included Goodsprings, Sandy Valley, I-15 between Primm and Las Vegas, Boulder City. Basically, where the colors are brighter on the radar loop above. You can see the extent of the snowpack as seen on satellite Monday on the loop above as well. So what were the highest amounts reported?

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Snow remains on Arizona.

I live in the Vegas valley. I’ve seen snow on the ground several times in the last 20 years, just not everywhere. Probably around 2006 or so, I remember a storm that dropped about 5-6″ around town and I had to go out in my 4wd to pick up someone who was stranded. That was fairly near the airport, so they should have been measuring there. We had another small snowfall 3-4 years ago as well, and I remember visiting in the mid ’90s when the fountains were all frozen, though I don’t recall snow on the ground.
So, it’s now up to those crazy climate scientists to explain how the polar vortex is extending as far south as Las Vegas (latitude 36.2° N).
This is also called Dynamic or Evaporative Cooling…the opposite of Latent Heating – heat being absorbed from the air when evaporation or sublimation occurs.
Warmth has left the building.
Are we sure it wasn’t complimentary cocaine dropped from the rooftops of casinos to attract players?
This is truly a crock. This is wrong.
This shows the historical amounts of snow received by Las Vegas.
https://www.currentresults.com/Yearly-Weather/USA/NV/Las-Vegas/extreme-annual-las-vegas-snowfall.php
The weather service said there was 2 inches on Dec. 15, 1967; 0.4 inches on Dec. 5, 1972; 1 inch on Dec. 6, 1998; 1.3 inches on Dec. 30, 2003; and 3.6 inches on Dec. 17, 2008 and many more days.
If you’re going to report something, do your fact checking first
while snow is indeed rare in vegas, but the headline is not quite true. the last time it snowed was not in 1937, but just about a decade ago – in 2008. 1979 probably holds the record of snow accumulation in one day – over 7 inches. … nonetheless, it is strange that media goes amuck highlighting this year being the 4th highest temperature and all, but remains so silent when the pendulum swings the other way.
Compare geomagnetic activity in 2008 and January 2019.

The snowstorm from New Mexico is moving towards the Great Lakes.

Very strong snowfall is approaching Lake Michigan.

There is a nugget in the article: “The atmosphere is trying to evaporate the precipitation as it falls, and this cools the atmosphere to its wet bulb temperature.”
Indeed so. And do any of the numerical models by which climate simulations are performed directly calculate this effect? Nope. Not even close. And yet the sales force for the climate crisis, based on the models, insists we believe the claims. Not buying it.
The snow hurricane is heading to the Great Lakes.
https://www.tropicaltidbits.com/sat/satlooper.php?region=us&product=wv-mid
Since the turn of the century a small army of mainly but not exclusively solar scientist have informed us that in the latter part of solar cycle 24 that the planet will begin to cool.
It is now doing that.
They are demonstrably correct.
All else is foolishness.