March 2015 North American winter storm explained

Formed:March 1, 2015
Dissipated:March 7, 2015
Maximum Snow:Snowfall – 54.6inches in Schofield Pass, Colorado
Ice – 0.25inches near Jackson, Mississippi
Lowest Temperature:-16F in Montpelier, Vermont on March 7
Pressure:993
Pressure-Suffix:[1]
Fatalities:None
Injuries:29 indirect
Areas:Southwestern United States, High Plains, Upper Midwest, Southeastern United States, Northern Mexico, Northeastern United States
Season:2014–15 North American winter

The March 2015 North American winter storm was a significant snow and ice storm that plowed through much of the United States, bringing NaNfeet of snow and record cold temperatures behind it.[2] [3] The storm actually occurred in two phases, with the latter bringing the cold temperatures behind it in its wake. Record cold temperatures even spread down to as far as northern Florida.

Meteorological history

The first phase of the storm came on March 2, as a vigorous area of low pressure formed along an arctic cold front. Drawing some moisture from the so-called "Pineapple Express" from the Pacific, snowfall began to develop in the Upper Midwest, spreading a swath of accumulating snow ranging from NaNinches into March 3.[4] Snow began to push into the Northeast by the evening, with generally light accumulations, before tapering off and changing to rain showers later that night. As the initial area of low pressure moved into the northeastern parts of Canada, its cold front lingered, stretching from Maine to western Texas. Because of the "Pineapple Express" pumping moisture into just about the same area where this arctic front was set up, snow began to break out as a plume of precipitation began to take shape by mid-day on March 4. This was the start of the final phase of the winter storm.[5] An icing threat also loomed ahead as well, stretching into the southwestern part of the Mid-Atlantic. A new area of low pressure then formed near the ArkansasLouisiana border and began to track eastward. Rain changed to moderate snowfall by 1 a.m EDT March 5, as cold air began to sink in. A long swath of snow then began to stretch from the southeastern tip of Massachusetts, into New York City, all the way down to the northern parts of Mississippi.[6] Snow from this system was that of the dry, fluffy kind, which was one reason power outages weren't so severe in the Northeast, however there was more in the ice portion of the storm. The storm continued to dump snow, ice and sleet across the eastern half of the United States, before moving off the coast late on March 5, leaving snow accumulations of NaNinches into the Northeast,[4] and record cold in its wake, with some areas, like Jackson, Mississippi, experiencing a near 50 °F (28 °C) drop in 24 hours as the arctic front moved through. Several daily, and monthly, record lows were set.[2]

Impact

Snowfall totals

The maximum snowfall total recorded during the storm was 54.6inches in Schofield Pass, Colorado.

Maximum Snowfall by state!State!Place(s)!Snowfall total!State!Place(s)!Snowfall total
IllinoisBrookport and Mound City11inchesPennsylvaniaEast Nantmeal11.3inches
IndianaCharlestown11inchesRhode IslandSaunderstown and South Kingstown12inches
IowaOlin1.1inchesVermontnear Cabot3.5inches
KansasLiberal3.5inchesVirginiaWashington Dulles International Airport9.4inches
MichiganNewberry5.3inchesWest VirginiaBuckeye and Davis14inches
MinnesotaWrenshall6.5inchesArkansasnear Bono11inches
MissouriKennett15.5inchesKentuckynear Radcliff25inches
Nebraskanear Harrison6inchesMississippinear Horn Lake4.4inches
Ohionear Waterloo17inchesOklahomaNew Cordell5inches
South Dakotanear Porcupine5inchesTennesseeMartin13.5inches
WisconsinIron River6inchesTexasGrapevine7inches
ConnecticutLedyard9inchesArizonanear Parks12inches
Mainenear Fort Kent7.5inchesCaliforniaSquaw Valley32inches
MarylandHighfield15inchesColoradoSchofield Pass54.6inches
MassachusettsDennisport12inchesNevadaDiamond Peak Ski Resort24inches
New HampshirePittsburg4inchesNew MexicoTaos Ski Area21inches
New JerseyScotch Plains and Roselle Park8.8inchesUtahBuckboard Flat49inches
New YorkGreat Kills9.5inchesWyomingCasper Mountain18inches
Reference:

Travel

The winter storm snarled travel across many areas in the United States, including a massive pileup on Interstate 65 in Kentucky, in which some people were stranded on the highway for hours. Several other travel-related issues included a 14-car pileup on Interstate 459 in Alabama, and a jackknifed semi and flipped snow plow in Washington D.C..[7] [8] Over 4,000 flights were canceled due to the storm.

While landing at LaGuardia Airport, Delta Air Lines Flight 1086 lost control on a snowy runway attributed to the winter storm. Combined with excessive braking action, the aircraft lost control and veered off the side of the runway.[9] Between 23[10] and 29 minor injuries were reported and the aircraft was subsequently written off.[11] The winter storm produced 8.4inches of snow at the airport.[12]

Closures

The ice caves at Apostle Islands National Lakeshore were temporarily closed due to the winter storm.[13] Many schools, businesses, and local government offices in the Northeast and Southern United States were closed.[14]

Cold snap

Multiple records for cold temperatures were set during and after the storm. Lexington, Kentucky got its heaviest two-day snowstorm. At least 26 daily record lows were set for cities across the lower 48 states, with six places being at or below 0F. Record low March temperatures were set in Pittsburgh (-5F), Harrisburg (-1F), Paducah, Kentucky (-6F and Urbana, Illinois (-7F).[2] [3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: WPC Surface Analysis Archive. 10 April 2016.
  2. Web site: Record-Breaking Cold: All-Time March Record Lows Set. The Weather Channel. March 7, 2015. April 3, 2016.
  3. Web site: Winter Storm Thor: Record Two-Day Snowstorm in Lexington, Kentucky; Snow, Ice, Flooding Reports. The Weather Channel. March 6, 2015. April 10, 2016.
  4. Web site: Winter Storm Thor: Significant Snow, Sleet, Ice Maker in the South and East (RECAP). The Weather Channel. March 6, 2015. April 3, 2016.
  5. News: 'Polar' meets 'pineapple': The meteorology behind a unique winter storm. Jeff Halverson. 6 March 2015. Washington Post. 10 April 2016.
  6. Web site: The Weather Channel on Twitter. Twitter.
  7. Web site: News. 3 March 2015. The Weather Channel. 10 April 2016.
  8. Web site: UPDATE: I-65 shut down near Elizabethtown, hundreds of motorists - WDRB 41 Louisville News. Antoinette Konz. 5 March 2015. 10 April 2016.
  9. Aircraft Accident Report: Runway Excursion During Landing; Delta Air Lines Flight 1086; Boeing MD-88, N909DL; New York, New York; March 5, 2015 . September 13, 2016 . . June 5, 2023.
  10. News: Dastin . Jeffrey . Jaisinghani . Sagarika . Flight crew cite brake problem in Delta NYC accident: NTSB . June 5, 2023 . [Yahoo News |date=March 9, 2015].
  11. Web site: ASN Aircraft Accident McDonnell Douglas MD-88 N909DL New York-La Guardia Airport, NY (LGA) . Aviation Safety Network . June 5, 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230214175600/http://aviation-safety.net/database/record.php?id=20150305-0 . February 14, 2023 . dead.
  12. https://www.weather.gov/okx/storm03052015 March 5th Winter Storm
  13. News: Apostle Islands ice caves to reopen Thursday morning . January 19, 2023 . Superior Telegram . March 4, 2015.
  14. News: US snow: Plane skids off New York runway . June 5, 2023 . BBC . March 5, 2015.