New Year’s day set snow cover record in U.S.

January 4, 2013CLIMATE Snow coverage in the United States on New Year’s Day was the most in 10 years with 67 percent of the 48 contiguous states covered by snow, meteorologists say. That surpassed the previous record set in 2010, when the new year saw 61 percent of the United States beneath snow, AccuWeather.com reported Thursday. That was the year of the mid-Atlantic blizzard dubbed “Snowmaggedon” that set a long list of records in cities such as Philadelphia, Washington and Baltimore. “As far as New Year’s Days go, I think that our [2013] snow cover is very healthy,” AccuWeather.com Expert Senior Meteorologist Jack Boston said. Unusually low snow coverage percentages since record keeping began in 2004, with the exception of 2010, have been an anomaly, Boston said. “The temperature of the North Atlantic ocean has been in a warm cycle and that has resulted in eastern North America, on average, having milder temperatures during the last decade.” However, he said, most of the contiguous United States was above normal in snow coverage for the month of December 2012 as well. –Terra Earth
This entry was posted in Blizzard, Civilizations unraveling, Climate unraveling, Dark Ages, Earth Changes, Earth Watch, Electric power disruption & grid failure, Extreme Weather Event, Prophecies referenced, Record Cold temperatures, Record snowfall, Signs of Magnetic Field weakening, Time - Event Acceleration. Bookmark the permalink.

4 Responses to New Year’s day set snow cover record in U.S.

  1. Irene C says:

    All this snow is a good thing. Although I’m not fond of snow or cold weather, I would prefer that we don’t have another drought like we did in 2012. Now – I just pray it doesn’t all melt at once…

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  2. revparadigm says:

    I tell ya the earth is going through a cooling trend, which is far worse for humanity than global warming I believe with all my heart. There will be far greater food shortages, greater spreading of diseases, more violent weather overall than when it is warmer. Just take a close look at human history in parallel with the climate trends. Colder has always been far more deadly.

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  3. larry says:

    Did the volcano and earthquakes activities slow down?

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