2017–18 North American winter explained

Astro:December 21 – March 19
Meteo:December 1 – February 28
First Event Started:October 29, 2017
Last Event Concluded:April 15, 2018
Notable Event Name:January 2018 North American blizzard
Notable Event Duration:January 2–5, 2018
Notable Event Pressure:949
Notable Event Fatalities:22 fatalities
Notable Event Damage:$1.1 billion (2018 USD)
Rsi Storms:7 total
Major Storms:1 total
Maxsnow:39.3inches at Cobleskill, New York
(March 1–3, 2018)
Maxice:1inches at Lowville, New York
(April 12–15, 2018)
Fatalities:At least 92 total
Damages:≥ $5.7 billion (2018 USD)
Year:2017
Related:

The 2017–18 North American winter saw weather patterns across North America that were very active, erratic, and protracted, especially near the end of the season, resulting in widespread snow and cold across the continent during the winter. Significant events included rare snowfall in the South, an outbreak of frigid temperatures that affected the United States during the final week of 2017 and early weeks of January, and a series of strong nor'easters that affected the Northeastern United States during the month of March. In addition, flooding also took place during the month of February in the Central United States. Finally the winter came to a conclusion with a powerful storm system that caused a tornado outbreak and blizzard in mid-April. The most intense event, however, was an extremely powerful cyclonic blizzard that impacted the Northeastern United States in the first week of 2018. Similar to the previous winter, a La Niña was expected to influence the winter weather across North America.

While there is no well-agreed-upon date used to indicate the start of winter in the Northern Hemisphere, there are two definitions of winter which may be used. Based on the astronomical definition, winter began at the winter solstice, which in 2017 occurred on December 21, and ends at the March equinox, which in 2018 occurred on March 20.[1] Based on the meteorological definition, the first day of winter is December 1 and the last day February 28.[2] Each definition involves a period of approximately three months, with some variability with both definitions containing two months and a week. Winter is often defined by meteorologists to be the three calendar months with the lowest average temperatures. Since both definitions span the calendar year, it is possible to have a winter storm in two different years.

Seasonal forecasts

On October 19, 2017, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Climate Prediction Center released its U.S. Winter Outlook. The outlook noted a 55–65% chance that a La Niña would develop. According to CPC Deputy Director Mike Halpert, any such La Niña was expected to be "weak and potentially short-lived", but it could still affect the season. He also noted that La Niña years normally result in colder-than-average, wetter winters in the northern tier of the United States and the inverse conditions across the south. In terms of precipitation, wetter-than-average conditions were favored across the majority of the northern United States, including a region spanning from the northern Rocky Mountains to the eastern Great Lakes in addition to the Ohio Valley, Hawaii, and western and northern Alaska. Drier conditions were anticipated across the entire southern United States.

Above-average temperatures were favored across the southern two-thirds of the contiguous United States and along the east coast, as well as in Hawaii and the northern and western parts of Alaska. The outlook favored below-average temperatures in the northern tier, from Minnesota to the Pacific Northwest region as well as southeastern Alaska.

The remainder of the country was assigned equal chances of either above or below-normal temperatures or precipitation. The drought outlook noted that drought was likely to remain in parts of the northern Plains, with recovery likely to the west. The development of limited regions of drought was possible in regions that did not receive rainfall associated with tropical systems during the 2017 Atlantic hurricane season.[3]

Seasonal summary

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The North American winter of 2017–18 began in the month of November with the highest snow extent in at least one and a half decades, with snow covering over a quarter of the contiguous United States,[4] 22% more than the same date in 2011, the next-most-recent year with comparable snow coverage at that date. However, this trend did not last through all of the month, with the last week having the least snowfall of that time of year for the same time period.[5] This extensive snowpack was due in part to cold temperatures on an extent not seen since at least 2014 in the early part of the month caused by an Arctic front advancing southward into the northern United States, breaking several record low temperatures in major cities from the Upper Midwest to the Mid-Atlantic. In Minnesota, at least several places recorded temperatures below 0F on November 10, breaking several record lows – some places reached as low as -10F. In early December, following another outbreak of cold temperatures, a major winter storm impacted the far southern reaches of the United States – areas as far as the southern portions of the Gulf Coast up to the Mid-Atlantic states and New England received a wide swath of accumulating snowfall, significantly hampering travel and knocking power out to tens of thousands.[6] The rest of the month was generally warmer then average nationwide, primarily in the southwestern United States, and ranked as the third-warmest in historical records.[7] However, towards the end of the month, an outbreak of below-average temperatures impacted much of the continental United States over the holiday, with New York City recording its second-coldest New Year's Eve on record with a temperature of 9F.[8] January and the new year opened with cold temperatures remaining in place across the eastern part of the country, which would continue until the middle of the month. In the first week of 2018, an extremely powerful cyclonic blizzard developed off the Southeastern United States, explosively deepening as it traveled parallel to the East Coast.[9] The blizzard delivered snow as far south as Florida which rarely sees snowfall at all, and left a wide swath of snowfall totals up to NaNfeet in the Mid-Atlantic and New England. In addition, major coastal flooding occurred with the system as well and killed at least 11 people.[9] The following week around January 12–13, a major winter storm affected much of the Appalachian Mountains and interior New England,[10] and a few days later on January 16, a separate system dumped as much as 12inches in areas of North Carolina, and for the second time in a month brought snowfall to areas of the Florida Panhandle.[11] Another winter storm brought blizzard-like conditions and up to a foot of snow in the Upper Midwest the following week, with the Twin Cities in Minnesota receiving their largest one-day snowfall since December 2010 with 12.4inches falling on January 22.[12] [13] The long-term pattern that brought below-average temperatures to the eastern half of the United States largely abated by the latter part of January, but not before causing drought conditions to expand within the West to its largest coverage since May 2014, due to above-average temperatures across much of the region.[14]

The end of January saw some scattered snow-related events, but a pattern change in February brought warmer conditions to most of the U.S., and thus few wintry weather events – except for one that struck the Northeast in mid-February. Unprecedented warmth days later sent temperatures as high as 80F on February 21 in the eastern half of the country.[15] By the turn of March, however, a major pattern shift occurred in which the same regions in the Northeast were hit by four consecutive rounds of nor'easters and heavy snow within a three-week period. This led places such as New York City and New Jersey to have a March that was cooler then the previous February.[16] [17] The first one developed on March 1, and although the most severe damage was caused by flooding as well as snow, unusually high tides and storm surges along the coast, wind and downed trees caused massive inland power outages, Days later, a second nor'easter developed and rapidly strengthened while bringing heavy snowfall to New Jersey and interior New York. The storm caused up to 1 million people to lose power. Hundreds of flights were cancelled across the region, and many schools closed due to the nor'easter. Several municipalities in the Philadelphia area declared snow emergencies and many schools and government offices were closed on March 7. Nearly a week later, a third nor'easter affected the New England coast with near-blizzard conditions and coastal flooding on March 13. Wind gusts of 47mph were reported at Logan International Airport in Boston while gusts reached 77mph on Nantucket Island, 79mph in Hyannis, and 81mph in East Falmouth.

A storm surge of 3feet was reported on Nantucket while a 2.8feet storm surge was recorded in Boston. Over a foot of snow was reported in portions of New Hampshire, with Deefield receiving almost 29 inches and Middleton reported 28 inches. No widespread power outages were reported.[18] The storm brought heavy snow and blizzard conditions to Maine on March 13. Blizzard conditions were reported in Portland. Over a foot of snow was reported in portions of the state. The fourth and final nor'easter occurred on March 20 to 22, with its focus further south in the Mid-Atlantic. Some areas saw their heaviest late-season snowfall on record, and approximately 100,000 lost power as a result of the storm.

The pattern largely abated by late March, but soon made a comeback as many regions in the northern half had one of the coldest Aprils on record, and the snowpack in the U.S. was well-above average for the month of April. Part of this was due to a rare, late-season and powerful blizzard that struck the High Plains with nearly NaNfeet of snowfall. Wintry weather soon came to an end in the country for the season after the storm had passed.

Events

Late October nor'easter

Rsi:0
Max Snow:8.5
Track:October surface analysis.gif
Lowest Pressure:975
Duration:October 29–30, 2017
Fatalities:0 fatalities
Damage:≥ $100 million (2017 USD)

See main article: October 2017 nor'easter. Near the end of October, just before Halloween, a powerful extratropical cyclone formed in the Atlantic Ocean off of the coast of New England. Rapidly intensifying into a powerful nor'easter,[19] the winter storm was enhanced by moisture left over from Tropical Storm Philippe – which dissipated over Cuba and spawned an unrelated non-tropical low that the nor'easter later absorbed – before hitting New England and eastern Canada.

The nor'easter resulted in approximately 1.2 million power outages in New England. The system produced tropical storm-force sustained winds, reaching 57 mph (92 km/h) in Warwick, Rhode Island, and hurricane-force wind gusts, peaking at 93 mph (150 km/h) in Popponesset, Massachusetts.[20] [21] The system also produced snowfall mainly in the higher elevations, in areas such as West Virginia and some parts of western Maryland.[22] Snowfall totals reached up to over 8inches in some spots, causing accidents and requiring snow plowers to be deployed in Preston County.[22]

In Canada, Hydro-Québec reported 200,000 customers losing power because of damages due to winds of NaNkm/h. It also rained heavily in Quebec and Eastern Ontario, with up to in the Canadian capital region of Ottawa forcing Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to use an all-terrain vehicle to leave from his second home on Mousseau Lake in Gatineau Park to go to Parliament.[23]

Mid-November cold wave

After an exceptionally warm September and October for many places in the Midwestern and Northeastern United States, a strong Arctic air mass entered the Midwest on November 9, resulting in some of the coldest temperatures ever recorded this early in the season. On November 9, Winnipeg saw a record cold low of -23.7C and record cold high of -11.4C.[24] Lake-effect snow fell in places like the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, where the Mackinac Bridge had to be closed due to low visibility.[25] Chicago on November 10 also reported Lake-effect snow.[26] The timeframe of November 10–11 broke record lows from northern Minnesota to the New York City tri-state area. On November 10, record lows were recorded in the Midwest. Among these November 10 records were five locations in the Upper Midwest that plunged below zero. In addition to the International Falls, Minnesota (-14F),[27] the coldest, and even earliest, record lows mentioned above were set in Hibbing, Minnesota -12F, Duluth, Minnesota and Pellston, Michigan -5F, and Merrill, Wisconsin -1F.[28] The Arctic intrusion on November 10 came as a shock to people that had yet to seen temperatures cold enough for frost, especially in New England. Before then, not only it was one of the warmest Fall seasons to that date, places like Philadelphia and Washington D.C. had yet to see a day/night that was below 40F since the previous Spring earlier that year. The low temperature in Philadelphia early in the morning of November 11 was 23F. This came 2°F (1°C) within reaching the record set for that day in 1961. Washington D.C. tied their record of 26F that same morning set back in 1973. Boston saw two nights of record lows, as November 10 had a record low of 24F and November 11 had a record low of 23F.[29] New York City also set record lows of 25F on November 10 and 24F on November 11, and the high on November 11 was below what the typical low temperature is, at 38F.[30] In New Jersey, Trenton and Atlantic City set record lows, both at 21F.[31] Wilmington, Delaware also set a record low that day, at 20F.[32] Many cities in the Great Lakes and Northeast set record lows that morning, which record lows were recorded as far south as Charlotte, North Carolina. Forecasters even called for an earlier start to winter ahead of this cold wave, and a colder winter then the last 2 years.[33] [34] [35]

Early December winter storm

Rsi:3.077
Max Snow:25
Track:Fairmount, Georgia snow, Dec 2017.jpg
Lowest Pressure:995
Duration:December 7–10, 2017
Fatalities:7 fatalities

See main article: December 2017 North American winter storm.

See also: Snow Bowl (2017). A strong winter storm affected areas from northeastern Mexico to the Northeastern United States in early December. The origins of the storm were complex, with the initial disturbance forming over the extreme southern United States as a stationary front left behind from a departing extratropical cyclone on December 7.[36] At the same time, a cold air mass was establishing itself into the Deep South. A large plume of moisture encompassed the entire Gulf Coast, and snow broke out early on December 8 in places that rarely even see snow, including Mexico, southeastern Texas and Louisiana – even in the Florida Panhandle.[37] [38] The storm dropped up to 25inches of snow in some parts of the Southeast as it slowly moved eastwards, breaking several snowfall records; meanwhile, a gulf low formed in the Gulf of Mexico the same day – this would ultimately become the dominant low of the system.[39] [40] Transitioning into a nor'easter off the East Coast of the United States, the system began moving parallel to the shoreline, with a large swath of snowfall accompanying it. The low slowly deepened throughout the day of December 9, bringing the first snow of the season to many parts of the Northeast and New England.[40]

Up to 400,000 people were left without power across the affected regions, several schools and roads shut down, and 3 were have confirmed to have been killed by the storm as of December 9. One person died in Georgia, and two in Virginia.[38] The storm dumped over 6inches of snow across 17 states. The highest amount, 25.5inches, was in Mount Mitchell, North Carolina.[41] The storm brought the earliest measurable snow in the history of Mobile, Alabama.[42] Alabama had numerous car crashes along Interstate 65.[43] Atlanta International Airport saw over 1,000 cancellations due to the storm.[44] Snow fell as south as the Florida Panhandle and Brownsville, Texas, the latter was recently just shy of 90F three days earlier.[45] Lafayette, Louisiana recorded their snowiest December day on record, with 1.7inches of snow.[46] Despite heavy snow falling at Orchard Park, New York, where the Buffalo Bills play, with NaNinches of snow falling during the game, the game was not cancelled.[47]

Post-Christmas–mid-January cold wave

See main article: December 2017–January 2018 North American cold wave. In late December, a strong Arctic air mass, due to the weakening of the Northern Polar vortex, came and established from Canada into the Midwestern and Northeastern United States with the core of the cold centered in the Upper Midwest, Interior Northeast, and Eastern Canada. Temperatures were NaNF-change below average for that time of year. International Falls, Minnesota recorded a record low temperature on December 27 of -32F.[48] In Indianapolis, Indiana, the temperature reached a new low of .[49] In 2017, Watertown, New York and Buffalo, New York each had it coldest final week on record for the year.[8]

In St. Louis, Missouri temperatures dropped to on New Year's Day. On January 2, a daily record low in Sioux City, Iowa was set at . Other daily record low temperatures included Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Pierre, South Dakota, South Bend, Indiana, Quincy, Illinois and Lynchburg, Virginia .[50]

In their first few days of 2018, the cold front was stretched as far south into the Caribbean. However, temperatures were much warmer - Havana didn’t see any temperatures below 14C.[51] [52]

Early January blizzard

Rsi:2.55
Track:January 2018 Nor'easter track.png
Max Snow:24
Duration:January 2–5, 2018
Lowest Pressure:949
Damage:$1.1 billion (2018 USD)
Fatalities:22 fatalities

See main article: January 2018 North American blizzard. A severe blizzard caused disruption along the Eastern United States in the first few days of the new year. It provided snow in municipalities that do not often receive and therefore are not accustomed to handling winter precipitation, such as Georgia and Florida, and accumulated over 2feet of snow in New England, the Mid-Atlantic states, and Eastern Canada. The storm started on January 3, 2018, moving rapidly to the northeast, after which time the system moved east, causing great snowfall. The storm was also dubbed as a "historic bomb cyclone".[53]

The blizzard produced snowfall and other forms of frozen precipitation across much of the United States Eastern Seaboard. As of the WPC's fifth winter storm summary, the highest official snowfall amount recorded is 17inches in Cape May Court House, New Jersey; however, a snowfall total of 52cm (20inches) was reported in Bathurst, New Brunswick. Freezing rain totals peaked at 0.5inches in Brunswick, Georgia and near Folkston, Georgia.[54] At least twenty-two fatalities were attributed to the storm, including at least eight car accident-related deaths. At least 4,020 flights were cancelled across the United States, with a majority of cancellations caused by the extensive winter storm. Insurers estimate that claims relating to coastal flooding from the storm will be more than those from snow-related damage.[55]

Early January West Coast cyclone & floods

A strong low-pressure system and cold front developed off the coast of California on January 5, 2018.[56] The system moved onto the mainland on January 8, bringing heavy rain to Southern California and prompting mandatory evacuations in parts of Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, and Ventura counties, over potential mudslides in areas affected by wildfires.[57] The storm intensified on the following day, with at least 4-1NaN-1 of rain falling over the two-day period, before ending on January 9, causing several major mudflows.[58] [59]

Approximately 163 people were hospitalized with various injuries, including four in critical condition.[60] The disaster occurred one month after a series of major wildfires. The conflagrations devastated steep slopes, which caused loss of vegetation and destabilization of the soil and greatly facilitated subsequent mudflows. The mudflows caused at least $177 million (2018 USD) in property damage,[61] and cost at least $7 million in emergency responses and another $43 million (2018 USD) to clean up.[62]

January winter storms

First storm (January 12–13)

A large winter storm complex spread a swath of snow and ice across the northern parts of the Ohio Valley and New England, as a strong cold front pushed through the regions with a developing low.[63] Several locations received up to a quarter inch of ice while others observed over 1feet of snow.

Second storm (January 16–18)

A widespread winter storm impacted a large portion Southern, Midwestern, and Northeastern United States and brought snow to places that rarely see it. This storm hit Texas and the Midwest on January 16, 2018. Then, the storm impacted New England and Mid-Atlantic states on January 17. Up to 2inches fell in Shreveport, Louisiana, marking the first time more than an inch of snow fell in Shreveport since 2015. Snow around Shreveport resulted in Interstate 49 shutting down in the area.[64] Austin, Houston, and San Antonio, Texas saw many vehicle accidents because of sleet and freezing rain on the morning of January 16. This led to an overwhelming number of vehicular accidents, such as several accidents in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex near Canton. In Galveston, hundreds of pipes froze and burst, depleting the city's water reserves to drought levels and forcing Galveston County and Chambers County to implement mandatory water conservation measures until the pipes could be fixed. Florida observed snow for the third time during the winter, with snow and freezing rain observed in portions of the Florida Panhandle. Snow fell in Crestview and DeFuniak Springs while freezing rain fell in Fort Walton Beach. Pensacola saw sleet which accumulated on grass and vehicles. The Bob Sikes Bridge to Pensacola Beach was closed due to ice.[65] In North Carolina on January 17, Winston-Salem received 6inches of snow, Greensboro had 6inches to 8inches, Burlington had 8inches to 9inches,[66] and part of Durham had 9.5inches, while areas to the north of Durham had 10inches to 12inches.[67] Snow fell on portions of the East Coast and Northeast. East Machias, Maine got 11inches, Stockbridge, Massachusetts got 11inches, Rosendale, New York got 10inches, Loyseville, Pennsylvania got 9.5inches, Dover, New Hampshire got 8inches, Canaan, Connecticut got 7inches, and Wantage, New Jersey got 6.4inches.[68] Ten people were killed due to the storm,[69] and numerous roads were shut down as well.[70]

Mid-February Mid-Atlantic winter storm

Rsi:0
Max Snow:10
Duration:February 17–18, 2018
Lowest Pressure:1007
Damage:Unknown
Fatalities:1 fatality

On February 17–18, a quick-moving winter storm swept through the Mid-Atlantic states, bringing a swath of NaNinches across the area, which some hadn't seen since early January due to warmer-than-average temperatures. The system intensified once offshore,[71] but its impacts caused widespread disruption and slippery roads across metro areas in the overnight hours. Ice accumulations also occurred and served to sag some trees in Virginia.[72] A person died due to a fatal crash on Interstate 99.[73]

Late February ice storm

For several days in late February, a large surge of moisture resulted in a significant ice storm affecting much of the Central United States.[74] On February 23, icy conditions caused a plane to skid off a runway in Green Bay, Wisconsin.[75] Hundreds of thousands were without power in Texas,[74] and Oklahoma schools postponed all basketball games as well. Total ice accumulations ranged from NaNinches, resulting in travel delays and accidents across much of the affected areas.[76]

March nor'easters

After a period of record warmth in late February, weather patterns across the continent abruptly became much more active in March. Four powerful nor'easters affected the United States and eastern Canada in that month alone, each dropping more than a foot of snow in the areas affected. Much of the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area closed due to the nor'easters.[77]

March 1–3 nor'easter

Rsi:2.185
Max Snow:39.3
Duration:March 1–3, 2018
Lowest Pressure:974
Damage:$2.25 billion (2018 USD)
Fatalities:9 fatalities

See main article: March 1–3, 2018 nor'easter. The first nor'easter began to take shape over the Mid-Atlantic states at the transition of February and March. As an area of low pressure moved into the interior Northeast late on March 1, snowfall fell in areas close to the Canada–United States border, while precipitation in coastal areas was rain due to slightly warmer air.[78] Overnight into the early morning hours of March 2, a new area of low pressure formed and rapidly strengthened off the coast of New Jersey, while snow began to slowly increase in coverage near Pennsylvania and southern New York.[79] Wet bulbing helped bring snow to areas closer on the coast, such as New York City.

Although the most severe damage was caused by flooding as well as snow, unusually high tides and storm surges along the coast, wind and downed trees caused massive inland power outages,[80] [81] [82] with the number of outages as high as 1.6 million at one point.[83] As of March 2, at least 9 people are known to have been killed as a result of the storm, five from falling trees or branches.[83]

March 6–8 nor'easter

Rsi:2.475
Max Snow:36
Duration:March 6–8, 2018
Lowest Pressure:986
Damage:$525 million (2018 USD)
Fatalities:2 fatalities

See main article: March 6–8, 2018 nor'easter. As the first nor'easter occurred, a smaller, but significant blizzard struck the Sierra Nevada mountains and then tracked across the continent as a large weather front, dropping snow across the Midwestern United States and interior Canada. As it reached the Great Lakes on March 6, another low pressure area formed off the Outer Banks of North Carolina. By mid-afternoon the next day, the two systems had merged into a second nor'easter, which rapidly intensified off the New Jersey coastline and dropped up to over 3feet or more of wet snow across much of the Northeast, which hampered the recovery efforts from the first nor'easter. The storm caused up to 1 million people to lose power, and at least 1 person has been confirmed dead due to the storm as of March 7.

Hundreds of flights were cancelled across the region, and many schools closed due to the nor'easter, although some opted to remain open. Many freeways were also closed in the regions, and several states were put under state of emergencies. In Pennsylvania, Governor Tom Wolf declared a state of emergency for several counties in the eastern part of the state.[84] A snow emergency went into effect for the city of Philadelphia on the morning of March 7.[85] Several municipalities in the Philadelphia area declared snow emergencies and many schools and government offices were closed on March 7. Many attractions in the Philadelphia area either closed early or were closed for the entire day on March 7.[86] The nor'easter had moved off by the morning of March 9, but its remnants stalled over Maritime Canada and persisted throughout the weekend.

March 12–14 nor'easter

Rsi:4.335
Track:2018-03-13 Surface Weather Map NOAA.png
Max Snow:30
Duration:March 11–15, 2018
Lowest Pressure:966
Fatalities:1 fatality
Damage:>$669,000[87] [88]

See main article: March 11–15, 2018 nor'easter. On the night of March 11, several areas of low pressure developed over the American Southeast and merged into a third nor'easter within 24 hours. On March 13, the storm produced blizzard conditions and a swath of 1–3 feet of snow in New England as it moved northeast into the Gulf of Maine. The storm brought heavy snow blizzard conditions to Rhode Island on March 13. Blizzard conditions were reported in Newport. Most of the state received at least one foot of snow, peaking at 25.1inches in Foster.[89] The storm brought the heaviest March snow on record in Boston and Worcester.[90] The storm brought heavy snow and blizzard conditions to Massachusetts on March 13. Blizzard conditions were reported in several locations including Boston, Hyannis, Falmouth, Plymouth, Marshfield, and Martha's Vineyard. Over two feet of snow were reported in portions of the state, peaking at 28.3inches in Methuen.

Wind gusts of 47mph were reported at Logan International Airport in Boston while gusts reached 77mph on Nantucket Island, 79mph in Hyannis, and 81mph in East Falmouth.[91] A storm surge of 3feet was reported on Nantucket while a 2.8feet storm surge was recorded in Boston.[89] Over a foot of snow was reported in portions of New Hampshire,[89] with Deefield receiving almost 29inches and Middleton reported 28inches. No widespread power outages were reported.[18] The storm brought heavy snow and blizzard conditions to Maine on March 13. Blizzard conditions were reported in Portland. Over a foot of snow was reported in portions of the state.[89] Of the four nor'easters, the third storm was the strongest in terms of minimum pressure, at 966mb.

March 20–22 nor'easter

Rsi:1.6
Track:WPC LPA Forecast Mar 20 2018 1956UTC.gif
Max Snow:20
Duration:March 20–22, 2018
Lowest Pressure:988
Fatalities:4 fatalities
Damage:> $900 million (2018 USD)

See main article: March 20–22, 2018 nor'easter. A fourth nor'easter began developing on March 19, affecting areas further south near the Mid-Atlantic states, dropping a swath of NaNinches.[92]

Having been affected by three previous nor'easters in the month of March, the impending storm caused intense preparation across the region. In the early morning hours of March 20, several hundred flights were either canceled or rerouted ahead of the storm.[93] More than 4,000 flights were canceled on March 21, mainly because of the nor'easter.[92] Amtrak modified or canceled service on several trains running along the Northeast Corridor on March 21 and 22 due to the nor'easter.[94] Over 100,000 people lost power from the nor'easter.[92]

Late March–mid-April cold wave

A period of colder-then-average temperatures impacted a large swath of the United States east of the Rocky Mountains from late March to the middle of April, resulting in one of the coldest Aprils for many areas in years, especially the Upper Midwest.[95] This occurred as a result of a persistent pattern throughout much of April favoring high pressure within the Western United States, and troughs within the eastern half of the country, allowing cold air to funnel down. This pattern ended by May, and resulted in one of the most dramatic swings between months in the United States.[96]

In the states of Iowa and Wisconsin, the month was the coldest April ever experienced within the states' 124-year record, surpassing April 1907 by 1.5 °F (0.9 °C).[97] Many states experienced one of their top-ten coldest Aprils on record, with 8 other states seeing their 2nd coldest April, and the continental United States’s mean April temperature of 48.9F made it the 13th coldest April on record and the coldest since 1997.[98] The snow cover for most of April was the fifth-largest on record for the U.S.[99] On April 6, Aberdeen, South Dakota set a monthly record low of -6F.[100] The next day, the Minneapolis Twins play their coldest game in history, with a first-pitch temperature of 27F.[101] The cold snap also caused the postponement of 28 Major League Baseball games, including the aforementioned Yankees home opener. This set a record for the most baseball games postponed in a single month.[102]

Easter Monday snowstorm

On April 2, 2018, 5.5inches of snow to fall in New York City, with heavier snow in the suburbs. Snow fell at up to two inches per hour.[103] This was their heaviest April snow in 36 years. This forced the New York Yankees to postpone their home opener.[104] The New York Mets also postponed their game, only the second time in franchise history a game was postponed due to snow.[105] The storm led to 53 motor vehicle crashes in just 3 hours.[106] Portions of the metro area recorded nearly 8inches of snow that day.[107] This became the second biggest April snowstorm in Newark, New Jersey.[108] April 2018 became the second snowiest April on record in Bridgeport, Connecticut and the eighth snowiest on record in Central Park as a result.[109]

Mid-April blizzard

Rsi:15.7
Duration:April 12–15, 2018
Lowest Pressure:985
Max Snow:33
Fatalities:3 fatalities
Damage:$925 million (2018 USD)

In mid-April, a powerful weather system created heavy snow and blizzard conditions over much of the upper Midwest, as well as severe weather in the South. Green Bay, Wisconsin reported 24.2inches, its second-heaviest snowstorm of all time and largest ever for the month of April. Further east, a severe ice storm took place. Up to 1inches was reported in Lowville, New York, in the foothills of the Tug Hill Plateau.[110] In Ontario, a mix of snow, freezing rain, ice pellets and rain battered Toronto and the surrounding area, causing hundreds of vehicle collisions, flight cancellations, power outages and transportation delays. Freezing rain also caused problems in Ottawa, Montreal, and parts of New Brunswick.[111]

Records

Northern United States

On January 1, 2018 in Aberdeen, South Dakota, a new low temperature of was set.[112] On January 2, a daily record low in Sioux City, Iowa was set at . Other daily record low temperatures included Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Pierre, South Dakota, South Bend, Indiana, Quincy, Illinois and Lynchburg, Virginia .[113]

Eastern United States

In Indianapolis, Indiana, the temperature reached a new low of .[114] On January 6, Raleigh–Durham International Airport in North Carolina set a record for the longest time spent below, 159 hours according to WTVD. The record of eight days set in 1895 and 1917 still had yet to be broken, but temperatures were not recorded every hour at that time.[115] On January 7, temperatures in Massachusetts were so cold that part of Buzzards Bay froze.[116]

On February 21, 2018, record warm temperatures affected the eastern part of the United States. Numerous state record highs were set, including a new February record high of 79F in New York, 77F in Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine, 83F in New Jersey, and 80F in Massachusetts and Ohio. February 20 also saw record high February temperatures in Pittsburgh (78F), Indianapolis (77F), Charlestown, WV (81F), and Cincinnati (79F). Record high lows were also set, including one as high as 66F in Louisville. This was due to a record breaking ridge.[117] Washington DC hit 82F, the warmest so early in the season.[118] Eight states had record warm February’s in the United States, them being Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts. In addition, flooding on the Ohio River made this a record wet February across Arkansas, Tennessee, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, and Pennsylvania.[119]

Canada

Some Canadian cities had some of their coldest New Years on record, affecting plans in towns such as Calgary (which forecast a high of -26C), Ottawa (overnight low of -24C), and Toronto (-15C, -30C after wind chill), although the CBC reported that Montreal and Winnipeg decided to go on without any changes.[120] [121] On January 5, Toronto broke a 59-year-old record with a morning low temperature of -23C at the Pearson International Airport weather station.[122]

Season effects

This is a table of all of the events that have occurred in the 2017–18 North American winter. It includes their duration, damage, impacted locations, and death totals. Deaths in parentheses are additional and indirect (an example of an indirect death would be a traffic accident), but were still related to that storm. All of the damage figures are in 2018 USD.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Earth's Seasons: Equinoxes, Solstices, Perihelion, and Aphelion, 2000-2025. United States Naval Observatory. August 10, 2017. October 19, 2017. Washington, D.C.. PHP. https://web.archive.org/web/20150831000837/http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/EarthSeasons.php. August 31, 2015. live.
  2. Web site: Meteorological vs. Astronomical Seasons. NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information. June 21, 2013. October 19, 2017.
  3. News: U.S. Winter Outlook: NOAA forecasters predict cooler, wetter North and warmer, drier South: Drought likely to persist in northern Plains. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. October 19, 2017. November 11, 2017.
  4. News: Early November Snow Cover in North America the Highest in Over a Decade. Erdman. Jonathan. The Weather Channel. November 8, 2017. November 28, 2017.
  5. News: Lower 48 States Snow Cover Hits Record Low For the Last Week of November. Erdman. Jonathan. The Weather Channel. November 28, 2017. November 28, 2017.
  6. https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/storm_summaries/event_reviews/2017/SouthernPlains_Northeast_WinterStorm_Dec2017.pdf Southern Plains to Northeast Winter Storm 7-10 December, 2017
  7. Web site: National Climate Report - December 2017 | State of the Climate | National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI). www.ncdc.noaa.gov.
  8. News: Times Square braces for one of coldest New Year's Eve parties on record. Associated Press. 2017-12-31. The Guardian. 2018-01-01. en-GB. 0261-3077.
  9. https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/storm_summaries/event_reviews/2018/EasternUS_WinterStorm_Jan2018.pdf Eastern United States Winter Storm 03-05 January, 2018
  10. Web site: Winter Storm Hunter Spreads a Mess of Snow, Sleet and Ice Across the Midwest, East and mid-South (Recap) | The Weather Channel - Articles from The Weather Channel | weather.com. The Weather Channel.
  11. https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/storm_summaries/event_reviews/2018/SouthernEasternUS_Snow_Jan2018.pdf Southern and Eastern U.S. Snowfall January 16-18, 2018
  12. 956147386799349760. wxjerdman. Per the ACIS database, Monday was.... 24 January 2018.
  13. Web site: Winter Storm Jaxon Was a Cross-Country Snowstorm, Plains Blizzard in Late January (RECAP) | The Weather Channel - Articles from The Weather Channel | weather.com. The Weather Channel.
  14. Web site: Assessing the U.S. Climate in January 2018. July 25, 2018. National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI).
  15. https://www.climate.gov/news-features/event-tracker/record-warmth-february-2018 Record warmth in February 2018
  16. https://thestarryeye.typepad.com/weather/2018/04/march-2018-weather-recap-chronic-chill-follows-mildest-february-.html%20 March 2018 Weather Recap: Chronic Chill Follows Mildest February
  17. https://www.njweather.org/content/lion-roared-all-month-long-march-2018-summary The Lion Roared All Month Long: March 2018 Summary
  18. News: Staff Writer . Nor'easter Dumps Nearly 30 Inches in Maine, New Hampshire . . . 2018-03-14 . 2018-03-14 .
  19. News: Powerful Coastal Storm Will Likely Bring Damaging Winds, Flooding Rainfall to the Northeast Starting Sunday Into Monday; Bombogenesis Possible. https://web.archive.org/web/20171028235841/https://weather.com/forecast/national/news/2017-10-26-northeast-weekend-storm-damaging-wind-heavy-rain. Dolce. Chris. The Weather Channel. October 30, 2017. October 28, 2017. November 12, 2017.
  20. News: Ellis. Ralph. 1.2 million in Northeast without power as Tropical Storm Philippe fizzles out. CNN. October 30, 2017.
  21. Web site: Public Information Statement. National Weather Service. October 30, 2017. October 20, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171020182309/http://forecast.weather.gov/product.php?site=NWS&issuedby=BOX&product=PNS. dead.
  22. Web site: Northeast Storm Undergoes Bombogenesis, Bringing 70+ MPH Gusts, Almost 350 Reports of Wind Damage, Flooding .
  23. fr. La Presse Canadienne. Vent forts: 83 000 foyers toujours privés d'électricité. La Presse. October 30, 2017. October 30, 2017.
  24. Web site: Winnipeg's November 2017 Kicked off with Record Cold then Warmed, Remained Dry • A Weather Moment . 10 February 2018 .
  25. Web site: Royce, J. (2017, November 9). Lake effect snow hits northern Michigan. Retrieved December 29, 2017.
  26. Web site: Sun-Times Wire. (2017, November 10). Lake effect snow showers cause driving woes, sends plows to streets. Retrieved December 29, 2017. December 29, 2017. December 29, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171229232655/https://chicago.suntimes.com/chicago-politics/more-than-200-snow-plows-deployed-as-light-snow-falls-in-chicago/. dead.
  27. https://weather.com/forecast/regional/news/2017-11-07-record-cold-temperatures-northeast-winter-chill Arctic Cold Setting Dozens of Daily Records in the Northeast, Midwest Through Veterans Day
  28. News: Donegan, B. (2017, November 11). Arctic Cold Setting Dozens of Daily Records in the Northeast, Midwest Through Veterans Day - wunderground.com. Retrieved December 29, 2017.
  29. News: Boston is experiencing record-breaking cold temperatures . Boston.com . November 11, 2017.
  30. http://www.weathergamut.com/2017/11/11/record-low-temperatures-and-first-freeze-of-the-season-for-nyc/ Record Low Temperatures And First Freeze Of The Season For NYC
  31. News: Brrrr! Arctic blast brings record-breaking temps to N.J. . December 6, 2022 . Nj.com . November 11, 2019.
  32. https://www.nbcphiladelphia.com/news/local/records-for-coldest-temperatures-set-across-philadelphia-delaware-valley-region/33251/ Records for Coldest Temperatures Set Across Philadelphia, Delaware Valley Region
  33. News: Wood, A. R. (2017, November 09). Freeze warning - could be coldest Veterans Day on record. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  34. News: Wood, A. R. (2017, November 13). After record cold, can snow scares be far behind? Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  35. News: Samenow, J. (2017, November 07). Winter is taking charge early this November, and won't be super warm like the last two. Retrieved December 28, 2017.
  36. Web site: WPC Surface Analysis for 12/07/17. Weather Prediction Center. December 7, 2017. December 8, 2017.
  37. Web site: WPC Surface Analysis for 12/08/17. Weather Prediction Center. December 8, 2017. December 9, 2017.
  38. News: Winter Storm Benji Targets Northeast After Leaving Nearly 400,000 Without Power In the South, 3 Dead. Breslin. Sean. The Weather Channel. December 9, 2017.
  39. Web site: WPC Surface Analysis for 12/08/17. Weather Prediction Center. December 8, 2017. December 9, 2017.
  40. News: Winter Storm Benji Bringing the Northeast Seaboard's First Snow of the Season After Dropping Record-Setting Deep South Snow. Erdman. Jonathan. The Weather Channel. December 9, 2017.
  41. News: December 2017 snowstorm overperforms in 17 states!. AccuWeather. December 11, 2017. Jesse Ferrell. 5 March 2023.
  42. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/capital-weather-gang/wp/2017/12/11/a-look-back-at-the-freak-snowstorm-that-made-history-across-the-south/ A look at the freak snowstorm that made history across the South
  43. Web site: Snow piles up in Alabama; concern shifts to icing. Leigh. Morgan. December 8, 2017. al.
  44. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-12-09/delta-says-snowfall-forcing-more-atlanta-flight-cancellations Hundreds More Atlanta Flights Canceled as Snowstorm Whacks Delta’s Network
  45. https://weather.com/storms/winter/news/2017-12-09-rare-south-texas-florida-gulf-coast-snow-winter-storm-benji Snow Fell in South Texas, Along the Gulf Coast, Even the Florida Panhandle During Winter Storm Benji
  46. https://weather.com/storms/winter/news/2017-12-07-winter-storm-benji-deep-south-east-texas-northeast Winter Storm Benji Recap: Record-Setting Deep South Snow and a Brush With the Northeast
  47. https://www.democratandchronicle.com/story/sports/football/nfl/bills/2019/12/10/buffalo-bills-game-day-dec-10-2017-bills-13-colts-7-ot-lesean-mccoy-snowstorm-nathan-peterman/2356095001/ Remember the 2017 Snow Bowl? Bills beat the Colts and the crazy conditions
  48. News: Arctic air brings bone-chilling temperatures to US. Davidson. Lawrence. CNN. 2018-01-02.
  49. Record-breaking cold sweeps US in first days of 2018. 2 January 2018. 4 January 2018. Christian Science Monitor.
  50. Web site: Dangerously Cold Temperatures to Grip Northeast After Winter Storm Grayson as Arctic Outbreak Continues. 4 January 2018.
  51. http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/latestnews/Cold_front_to_enter_region_tomorrow_?profile=1228&template=MobileArticle?profile=1228&template=MobileArticle Cold front to enter region tomorrow.
  52. https://www.havanatimes.org/?p=129652 Havana Weather for January 4-10
  53. News: Historic 'bomb cyclone' unleashes blizzard conditions from coastal Virginia to New England. Frigid air to follow. . Samenow . Jason . January 4, 2018 . Washington Post . January 4, 2018.
  54. Web site: Kong. Kwan-Yin. Storm Summary Number 5 for Eastern U.S. Coastal Winter Storm. Storm Summary Message. National Weather Service's Weather Prediction Center. January 4, 2018. College Park, Maryland. January 4, 2018.
  55. News: Insurers brace for coastal flood losses from US 'bomb cyclone'. 8 January 2018. Insurance Day. 5 January 2018.
  56. News: Lindsey . John . January 6, 2018 . SLO County is expected to get heavy rain Monday and Tuesday — here's why . . San Luis Obispo . January 10, 2018.
  57. News: von Quednow . Cindy . Pascucci . Christina . Lyster . Lauren . Myers . Erin . Friel . Courtney . January 8, 2018 . 1st Major Storm of the Year Brings Rain to SoCal, Triggers Evacuations Amid Concerns of Mudslides in Burn Areas . . January 11, 2018.
  58. News: January 10, 2018 . The rain is done in Southern California. How much did we get? . . January 11, 2018.
  59. News: January 8, 2018 . Monday's Southern California storm is nothing compared to what we're getting Tuesday . Los Angeles Daily News . January 11, 2018.
  60. News: January 10, 2018 . California: Thirteen dead in Montecito rains and mudslides . . January 11, 2018.
  61. Web site: The Economic Impacts of the Montecito Mudslides: A Preliminary Assessment. Robert D. Niehaus, Inc.. March 2018. 26 May 2018. 26 May 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180526185909/http://www.rdniehaus.com/rdn/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/RDN_Montecito_Mudslides_Impacts-1.pdf. dead.
  62. Web site: County Estimates $46 Million Cost for Thomas Fire, Montecito Debris Flow Response, Repairs. Giana Magnoli. Noozhawk. 27 February 2018. 26 May 2018.
  63. Web site: Storm Summary Number 2 for Lower Mississippi, Tennessee, and Ohio Valleys to Lower Great Lakes Winter Storm. Storm Summary Message. National Weather Service's Weather Prediction Center. January 17, 2018. College Park, Maryland. January 12, 2018.
  64. https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/news/winter-storm-closes-freeways-runways-schools-south/ Winter storm closes freeways, runways, schools across the South
  65. Web site: Winter Storm Inga Brings Florida Its Third Snow Event This Winter. The Weather Channel. January 17, 2018. January 20, 2018.
  66. News: Storm smacks Forsyth County with 6 inches of snow. Sarah. Newell. Michael. Bragg. John. Hinton. Winston-Salem Journal. January 17, 2018. January 19, 2018.
  67. News: Record snow at RDU; Here's how much snow fell and where. WRAL-TV. January 18, 2018. February 1, 2018.
  68. Web site: Winter Storm Inga Brings Snow, Ice to the South and East, Snarls Travel Along the Gulf Coast; Third Snow Event This Winter in Florida (RECAP). 20 January 2018.
  69. https://www.denverpost.com/2018/01/17/deep-south-snow-storm-deaths/ At least 10 deaths from snow, ice and record cold in South
  70. https://www.wunderground.com/article/news/news/2018-01-17-winter-storm-inga-south-impacts Winter Storm Inga, Subsequent Cold Snap Kills at Least 16 in the South
  71. Web site: WPC Surface Analysis Archive. NOAA's National Weather Service. February 18, 2018. www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov. May 25, 2022.
  72. Web site: Winter Storm Noah Brings Quick Round of Snow to Parts of Northeast After February Thaw (RECAP) .
  73. https://wjactv.com/news/local/penndot-worker-killed-in-i-99-crash PennDOT worker killed in I-99 crash
  74. Web site: Winter Storm Oliver Brings Days-Long Icy Siege to Plains; Plane Skids Off Runway at Green Bay Airport Weather.com . 2024-08-19 . The Weather Channel . en-US.
  75. Web site: FAA investigating after plane slides off runway at Austin Straubel . 23 February 2018 .
  76. Web site: Winter Storm Oliver Brought Multiple Rounds of Snow and Ice from the West into the Plains, Midwest .
  77. https://www.lehighvalleylive.com/warren-county/2018/03/widow-makers_and_worse_storm_d.html Widow-makers' and worse: Storm damage closes Delaware Water Gap trails
  78. Web site: Storm Summary Number 1 for the Ohio Valley into the Northeast Storm. Storm Summary Message. National Weather Service's Weather Prediction Center. March 1, 2018. College Park, Maryland. March 1, 2018.
  79. Web site: Storm Summary Number 1 for Great Lakes to New England Winter Storm. Storm Summary Message. National Weather Service's Weather Prediction Center. March 2, 2018. College Park, Maryland. March 2, 2018.
  80. News: Fritz. Angela. Nor'easter forecast to topple flood record in Boston as winds push 80 mph. March 2, 2018. Washington Post. March 2, 2018.
  81. News: Karimi. Faith. 'Bomb cyclone' forms as flood threat sparks 'LIFE & DEATH' warning. March 2, 2018. CNN. March 2, 2018.
  82. News: Woods. Amanda. Another bomb cyclone batters the Northeast. March 2, 2018. New York Post. March 2, 2018.
  83. News: Nor'easter hits East Coast, grounds flights and halts trains; at least 5 dead. Associated Press. Salisbury Post. March 3, 2018. March 3, 2018.
  84. Web site: Gov. Wolf declares state of emergency, includes Southeastern Pennsylvania. WPVI-TV. Philadelphia, PA. March 7, 2018. March 7, 2018.
  85. Web site: Han. Nydia. Bloomquist. Sarah. Heavy nor'easter snow blankets Center City Philadelphia. WPVI-TV. Philadelphia, PA. March 7, 2018. March 7, 2018.
  86. Web site: List of local snow emergencies, closings. WPVI-TV. Philadelphia, PA. March 7, 2018. March 7, 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180306232917/http://6abc.com/weather/list-of-local-snow-emergencies-closings/3181547/. March 6, 2018. dead.
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  89. Web site: Blizzard Conditions Reported in Massachusetts, Maine, Rhode Island as Winter Storm Skylar Hammers New England With Whiteout Conditions. The Weather Channel. March 13, 2018. March 13, 2018.
  90. https://www.wunderground.com/article/storms/winter/news/2018-03-11-winter-storm-skylar-appalachians-northeast-snow-coastal-storm Winter Storm Skylar, Third Nor'easter to Strike the Northeast, Brought Blizzard Conditions and Feet of Snow to New England
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  92. Web site: Winter Storm Toby Shuts Down Schools, Causes Travel Headaches in Northeast. The Weather Channel. March 21, 2018.
  93. Web site: Yes, another nor'easter; 1,200+ cancellations (and counting). USA Today. 20 March 2018.
  94. Web site: Here's what you need to know about mass transit, travel during the nor'easter. WABC-TV. New York, NY. March 21, 2018. March 21, 2018.
  95. Web site: Synoptic Discussion - April 2018 - State of the Climate - National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI). Heim. noaa.gov. March 3, 2021.
  96. https://www.wunderground.com/cat6/nations-hottest-may-record-leaves-dust-bowl-dust Nation’s Hottest May on Record Leaves Dust Bowl in the Dust
  97. Web site: April 2018 Was the Coldest in Two Decades for the Continental U.S.; All-Time Record Lows Set in Two States .
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  99. Web site: Spring shiver: Last month was USA's coldest April in more than 20 years. USA Today.
  100. https://www.thrillist.com/news/nation/cold-weather-2018-april Three April Storms Are About to Set Cold-Weather Records Across the Country
  101. News: Johns . Greg . Mariners bats heat up frozen Minnesota . February 4, 2023 . . April 7, 2018.
  102. Web site: As heavy rains, heat waves become more common, fans could see more baseball games postponed . 2022-11-12 . Chicago Tribune. 2 October 2018 .
  103. http://www.weathergamut.com/2018/04/02/spring-storm-sets-new-daily-snowfall-record-in-nyc/ Spring Storm Sets New Daily Snowfall Record In NYC
  104. News: Shapiro . Emily . Spring storm hits Northeast, bringing NYC the most April snow in over 30 years . June 25, 2022 . ABC News . April 2, 2018.
  105. https://risingapple.com/posts/ny-mets-snow-out-history Snow Go? Here is the Mets' comprehensive snow-out history
  106. https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/april-snowstorm-monday-morning-snow-rain-tri-state-new-york-new-jersey-connecticut/458793/ Spring Storm Dumps 7+ Inches on Parts of Tri-State, Becomes Biggest April Snowstorm for NYC in 36 Years
  107. https://abcnews.go.com/amp/US/snow-unseasonable-cold-midwest-northeast/story?id=54170815 Spring storm hits Northeast, bringing NYC the most April snow in over 30 years
  108. https://www.nj.com/weather/2018/04/nj_weather_snow_storms_in_april_and_may.html Think it can’t snow in late spring? See the worst April and May snowstorms in N.J. history
  109. https://www.nrcc.cornell.edu/services/blog/2018/05/02/index.html Cold and Wet April
  110. News: Winter Storm Xanto Brought Historic April Snowfall to the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes, Including Minneapolis and Green Bay (RECAP). The Weather Channel. 2018-08-01. en.
  111. News: Ice storms, blizzards and high winds in April: Did spring forget about Canada?. Global News. 2018-08-01. en.
  112. News: Let it snow  — maybe even in Florida as cold wave tightens grip on USA . Usatoday.com . January 4, 2018.
  113. Web site: Dangerously Cold Temperatures to Grip Northeast Following Winter Storm Grayson as Arctic Outbreak Continues. Weather.com. January 4, 2018.
  114. Record-breaking cold sweeps US in first days of 2018 . January 2, 2018. January 4, 2018. The Christian Science Monitor.
  115. News: How cold is it? Triangle is approaching record territory. Johnson. Joe. News and Observer. January 6, 2018. January 7, 2018.
  116. Web site: Spectacular Freeze in Massachusetts. weather.com. The Weather Channel. January 8, 2018. en. Video. January 8, 2018. March 7, 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180307234434/https://weather.com/storms/winter/video/spectacular-freeze-in-massachusetts. dead.
  117. https://www.wunderground.com/cat6/summer-february-80-massachusetts-78-nyc Summer in February! 80° in Massachusetts, 78° in NYC
  118. https://wtop.com/weather-news/2018/02/earliest-80-degrees-in-88-years-could-happen-today/ 80-degree February: Wednesday’s high temperatures set records for area
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  120. News: Some NYE events on Parliament Hill cancelled due to cold. CBC News. 2018-01-04. en.
  121. News: Calgary, Toronto among Canadian cities rolling back NYE events due to extreme cold. CBC News. 2018-01-04. en.
  122. Web site: Toronto snaps 59-year-old record as extreme cold continues. cp24.com. 5 January 2018 . January 7, 2018.