Tag Archives: snowfall

Snowfall Totals, Travel Alerts Road Closures and More – NBC Chicago

A New Year’s Day snowstorm started making its way across the Chicago area, bringing dangerous travel conditions that halted hundreds of flights and sparked closures in the city as it threatened to dump several inches of snow.

Here’s the latest on what’s happening across the area as the heaviest snow begins to fall:

5:27 p.m.: Snowfall totals so far

Although the snow likely won’t stop soon, snow totals are beginning to come in.

Here are the totals that have been reported to the National Weather Service up until this point.

4:20 p.m.: Evanston reminds residents of off-street parking options

With several inches of snow expected in the region, the city of Evanston issued a reminder to residents about available free parking options.

As the city expects to see 5 to 7 inches of snow, off-street parking is encouraged to provide extra room for snow plows.

Free parking options are listed below:

  • Downtown parking garage, located at 1800 Maple Ave., through Thursday, Jan. 6 at 11:59 p.m. 
  • Evanston Township High School parking lots 1 and 1A. Drivers should enter the lots from Davis Street east of Dodge Avenue. 
  • AMITA Health is offering free parking to Evanston residents in its parking garage, located at Sherman Avenue and Austin Street.

The following city parking lots are also included:

  • Lot 3, 1700 Chicago Ave.
  • Lot 4, Central Street at Stewart Avenue (metered spaces only)
  • Lot 16, 800/900 Noyes St. at the CTA tracks
  • Lot 24, 727 Main St.
  • Lot 25, 1614 Maple Ave. (metered spaces only)
  • Lot 27, 1621 Oak Ave.
  • Lot 51, 927 Noyes St. (metered spaces only)
  • Lot 54, Central Street Metra Station

4:06 p.m.: Chicago officials issue alert regarding travel conditions

3:50 p.m.: Chicago’s street department shifts to new snow program phase

As snow pummeled the city of Chicago Saturday afternoon, the Department of Streets and Sanitation activated its Phase 3 snow program, increasing the number of salt spreaders throughout the city to 287.

DSS staff will continue to monitor the weather and ground conditions and will adjust snow resources if and when needed, according to a news release from department officials.

Residents are advised to stay home, but if travel is necessary, they’re encouraged to drive according to conditions and reduce speed.

3 p.m.: Winter weather advisory begins for some northwest Indiana counties

A winter weather advisory takes effect in some northwest Indiana counties, including Newton and Jasper.

The advisory, which remains in effect until 6 a.m. CT Sunday, warns of anywhere from 1 to 4 inches of accumulations as rain transitions to snow throughout the afternoon and evening.

2:50 p.m.: Huntley implements parking ban with more than 2 inches of snow on the ground

2:17 p.m.: Chicago Park District Closes Parts of Lakefront Trail

2 p.m.: Heaviest snow set to begin for some counties

For counties under the earliest winter storm warning, the heaviest snow is expected to fall between 2 and 8 p.m.

This includes in McHenry, DeKalb, Kane, LaSalle, Kendall, Grundy and Will counties in Illinois.

2 p.m.: Thousands of flights canceled

More than 1,000 flights were reported canceled in Chicago Saturday afternoon as a New Year’s Day snowstorm made its way into the area.

By 2 p.m. O’Hare International Airport had reported 844 cancellations while Midway Airport saw an additional 273.

Chicago was reported to be among the worst in the country for cancellations on the holiday due to the wintry weather.

12 pm. More counties now under winter storm warning

The warning begins at 12 p.m. CT in Lake, DuPage and Cook counties in Illinois, along with Lake and Porter counties in Indiana. Kenosha County in Wisconsin also has a winter storm warning at this time.

Snow, heavy at times, could also turn into blowing snow, making travel hazardous, according to the alert. Total accumulations of 5 to 9 inches are expected along with wind gusts of up to 40 mph in the afternoon and evening, particularly along the lakefront.

The warning remains in effect until 6 a.m. CT Sunday.

A winter weather advisory is also in effect for LaPorte County in Indiana at this time. The advisory, which remains in effect until noon Sunday, warns of snow accumulations between 5 and 7 inches, with some locations seeing higher amounts, particularly those near Lake Michigan.

9 a.m.: Winter storm warning took effect

A winter storm warning began at 9 a.m. in McHenry, DeKalb, Kane, LaSalle, Kendall, Grundy and Will counties in Illinois.

It warns of total snow accumulations between 4 and 8 inches with wind gusts of up to 35 mph in the afternoon and evening.

“Travel could become very difficult,” the alert states. “Blowing snow after sunset Saturday could significantly reduce visibility, especially in open areas.”

The warning remains in effect for these counties until midnight.

8:30 a.m. Chicago transportation department deploys hundreds of salt spreaders

At 8:30 a.m. Saturday, Chicago’s Department of Streets and Sanitation announced it would activated its “Phase II snow program, deploying 211 salt spreaders in response to a winter system that will result in snow throughout the day and into the night.”

The salt spreaders will focus on Chicago’s arterial routes and Lake Shore Drive before shifting to side streets, the department said.



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Increased snowfall will offset sea level rise from melting Antarctic ice sheet

The Jakobshavn Glacier, Greenland. Credit: Thomas Overly

A new study predicts that any sea level rise in the world’s most southern continent will be countered by an increase in snowfall, associated with a warmer Polar atmosphere. Using modern methods to calculate projected changes to sea levels, researchers discovered that the two ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica respond differently, reflecting their very distinct local climates.

The paper, published today in Geophysical Research Letters, is based on the new generation of climate models which are used in the newly published Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Sixth Assessment Report, reviewing scientific, technical, and socio-economic information regarding climate change.

The project brought together over 60 researchers from 44 institutions to produce, for the first time, process-based community projections of the sea level rise from the ice sheets. This particular paper focusses on one aspect of the overall project which is how the new generation of climate model projections used in the current IPCC assessments differ from the early generation in their impact on the ice sheets.

Professor Tony Payne, Head of Bristol’s School of Geographical Sciences said the team were trying to establish whether the projected sea level rise from the new generation of climate models was different from the previous generation. “The new models generally predict more warming than the previous generation but we wanted to understand what this means for the ice sheets.” he said. “The increased warming of the new models results in more melt from the Greenland ice sheet and higher sea level rise by a factor of around 1.5 at 2100.

“There is little change, however, in projected sea level rise from the Antarctic ice sheet. This is because increased mass loss triggered by warmer oceans is countered by mass gain by increased snowfall which is associated with the warmer Polar atmosphere.”

The recent findings suggest that society should plan for higher sea levels, and match with virtually all previous estimates of sea level rise, in that scientists expect sea levels to continue to rise well beyond 2100, most likely at an accelerating rate.

Prof Payne added: “Predicting the mass budget of the ice sheets from estimates of global warming is difficult and a great many of the processes involved require further attention.

“Discovering that warmer climates do not affect Antarctic mass budget, in particular, warrants further examination because this is based on large changes in snowfall and marine melt balancing.”

“One of the main things to take away from this, interestingly, is that the response of two ice sheets and what impact global heating has on them is different and depends heavily on their local conditions,” said Prof Payne.


1.5C warming cap could ‘halve’ sea level rise from melting ice


More information:
Antony J. Payne et al, Future sea level change under CMIP5 and CMIP6 scenarios from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, Geophysical Research Letters (2021). DOI: 10.1029/2020GL091741
Provided by
University of Bristol

Citation:
Increased snowfall will offset sea level rise from melting Antarctic ice sheet (2021, August 19)
retrieved 19 August 2021
from https://phys.org/news/2021-08-snowfall-offset-sea-antarctic-ice.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.



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6 Surreal Images Showing Rare Snowfall in Tropical Brazil

A man plays with snow at a farm in rural Sao Joaquim, Brazil, Thursday, July 29, 2021.
Photo: Mycchel Legnaghi (AP)

Snow has fallen in Brazil, an extremely rare event for the tropical country. Thanks to an intense cold snap, snow or freezing rain fell in at least 43 Brazilian cities on Wednesday and Thursday, according to weather service Climatempo.

South America has been buffeted in cold air ushered north from the Antarctic this week, resulting in some decided strange scenes across the continent. But none are more bizarre than those taking place in Brazil, parts of which haven’ seen snow in decades.

“I am 62 years old and had never seen the snow, you know? To see nature’s beauty is something indescribable,” a truck driver in Cambara do Sul, a municipality of Rio Grande do Sul state, told TV Globo network.

But while it’s certainly novel, the snow and attendant cold snap also had some serious consequences.

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2 waves of snowfall to hit by Tuesday

DETROITA winter weather advisory is in effect for Detroit and all of southeast Michigan from midnight Sunday until noon on Tuesday.

A flood warning is also in effect along the St. Clair River.


Welcome to Sunday evening, Motown.

The storm that is bringing snow and ice as far south as southern Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi will become a big snow storm for southern Michigan on Monday. Two waves of snow will arrive, with lighter snow on Sunday and heavier snow late on Monday. Get your snow shovels and snow throwers ready.

Sunday evening will be cloudy and very cold. Temperatures will be in the teens and low 20s. Scattered flurries are possible before midnight.

There are two rounds of snow arriving in Detroit and southeast Michigan beginning late Sunday night through Tuesday morning.

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The first round arrives after midnight Sunday. Overnight lows will be in the upper single digits as light snow showers cross the region. Much of the snow will have slowed by Monday morning, with 1 to 3 inches possible by mid-morning.

Monday afternoon will be mostly cloudy and very cold. Highs will be in the middle teens.

The second round of snow will impact the region late beginning Monday afternoon through Tuesday morning. The snow will be more widespread and intense. By the end of Tuesday morning, an additional 3 to 7 inches of snow accumulation are possible.

A grand total of 6 to 9 or 10 inches of snow is possible. The greater amounts of snow (7 to 10 inches) will be more likely in areas closer to the big lakes and the Detroit River and St. Clair River (from Port Huron through Mt. Clemens, Monroe and Luna Pier). Lower snow accumulations, which will still be significant (5 to 8 inches), will be in neighborhoods much farther north and west of Detroit (Livingston County through Flint, Lapeer and Sandusky).

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Tuesday will be very cold with afternoon temperatures in the upper teens.

Wednesday will be partly sunny and cold. Daytime temperatures will be in the low 20s.

There is a chance of snow showers Thursday. Highs will be near 30 degrees.

Friday and Saturday will have a mix of clouds and sun. Highs will be in the middle 20s.

Remember to download the FREE Local4Casters weather app — it’s easily one of the best in the nation. Just search your app store under WDIV and it’s right there available for both iPhones and Androids! Or click the appropriate link below.

Copyright 2021 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.

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N.J. weather: Updated snowfall totals across state, with 25 inches already on the ground in some towns

Those snow accumulation numbers across New Jersey keep shooting up, with several towns now reporting as much as 25 inches on the ground — and one town with a measurement of 30 inches as of 7:20 p.m. Monday.

All that snow, and the monster winter storm still has a long way to go before it tapers down.

The top snow totals Monday morning were 8 to 9 inches, but during the afternoon hours when the storm intensified, accumulations jumped to as much as a 2 feet in some parts of the Garden State. The big leader so far is Mendham in Morris County, with a whopping 30 inches of snow reported by the National Weather Service Monday evening.

That is only 4 inches away from matching New Jersey’s all-time snowstorm record of 34 inches — a record that has stood for nearly 122 years. The elusive record was set during a multi-day storm that stretched from Feb. 11 to Feb. 14, 1899, in Cape May.

Among the other huge snowfall totals reported Monday evening were 28 inches in Sparta in Sussex County, 26 inches in Ledgewood and Long Valley in Morris County, and 25.8 inches in Randolph, also in Morris.

Here’s a rundown of the latest snowfall accumulations in each county, reported by the National Weather Service’s regional forecast offices in New Jersey and New York regional office, along with the Community Cooperative Rain, Hail & Snow Network, as of 4 p.m. Monday.

MORE: Track snowfall projections for your town with new interactive map

(Note: Most of the totals listed below are from the early afternoon and mid-afternoon, but some are measurements that were taken Monday morning and have not yet been updated. Additional updates will be posted Monday night.)

Atlantic County

  • Mays Landing: 3.0 inches
  • Pomona: 2.5 inches
  • Egg Harbor City: 1.8 inches
  • Hammonton: 1.6 inches
  • Egg Harbor Twp.: 1.3 inches
  • Somers Point: 1.0 inch

Bergen County

(updated 9:40 p.m. Monday)

  • Closter: 22.4 inches
  • Westwood: 20.0 inches
  • Mahwah: 18.5 inches
  • East Rutherford: 18.3 inches
  • Dumont: 17.5 inches
  • Franklin Lakes: 17.5 inches
  • Northvale: 16.5 inches
  • Lyndhurst: 16.0 inches
  • Fair Lawn: 15.0 inches

Burlington County

  • Florence: 6.3 inches
  • Westampton: 6.1 inches
  • Mount Laurel: 5.6 inches
  • Lumberton: 5.5. inches
  • Columbus: 5.1 inches
  • Bordentown: 4.8 inches
  • Cooperstown: 4.1 inches
  • Moorestown: 3.8 inches
  • Mount Laurel: 3.7 inches
  • Southampton: 3.0 inches
  • Marlton: 2.8 inches
  • South Jersey Regional Airport: 2.8 inches

Camden County

  • Blackwood: 5.5 inches
  • Gloucester City: 5.1 inches
  • Haddon Heights: 5.1 inches
  • Springdale: 4.2 inches
  • Lindenwold: 4.0 inches

Cape May County

  • Goshen: 1.0 inch
  • Villas: 0.8 inches
  • Seaville: 0.5 inches

Cumberland County

  • Hopewell Twp.: 4.0 inches

Karen Lamberton of Montclair clears snow from her sidewalk as the white frozen stuff continues to pile up from the big winter storm on Monday, Feb. 1, 2021.Steve Hockstein | For NJ Advance Media

Essex County

(updated 9:40 p.m. Monday)

  • Essex Fells: 20.0 inches
  • West Orange: 18.2 inches
  • Newark Liberty Airport: 16.2 inches
  • Cedar Grove: 15.7 inches
  • North Caldwell: 15.0 inches
  • Verona: 14.3 inches
  • Millburn: 12.5 inches
  • South Orange: 12.5 inches
  • Caldwell Airport: 12.1 inches

Gloucester County

  • Greenwich Twp.: 4.3 inches
  • Mantua Twp.: 4.2 inches
  • Sewell: 3.0 inches
  • Westville: 3.0 inches
  • Malaga: 3.0 inches
  • Washington Twp.: 2.8 inches
  • Woodbury: 2.8 inches
  • Williamstown: 2.0 inches
  • Glassboro: 2.0 inches
  • Pitman: 1.4 inches

Hudson County

  • Harrison: 12.0 inches
  • Hoboken: 11.5 inches

Snow covers cars parked on East 12th Street in Bayonne during a winter storm on Monday, Feb. 1, 2021.

Hunterdon County

  • Whitehouse Station: 17.1 inches
  • Raritan Twp.: 15.0 inches
  • Flemington: 14.5 inches
  • Readington: 14 inches
  • Stanton: 13.0 inches
  • Lebanon: 10.2 inches
  • Clinton: 9.0 inches
  • Sand Brook: 8.6 inches

Mercer County

  • East Windsor: 9.5 inches
  • Hamilton: 8.8 inches
  • Princeton: 8.3 inches
  • Robbinsville: 8.2 inches
  • Ewing: 5.8 inches

Middlesex County

  • New Brunswick: 18.0 inches
  • South Plainfield: 17.0 inches
  • Port Reading: 16.5 inches
  • Iselin: 16.0 inches
  • East Brunswick: 15.0 inches
  • Perth Amboy: 15.0 inches
  • Woodbridge: 14.3 inches
  • Edison: 14.0 inches
  • Highland Park: 13.5 inches
  • Metuchen: 13.5 inches
  • Milltown: 13.0 inches
  • South River: 13.0 inches
  • North Brunswick: 12.0 inches
  • Carteret: 12.5 inches
  • South Brunswick: 11.5 inches
  • Plainsboro: 11.4 inches
  • Colonia: 11.2 inches
  • Old Bridge: 11.0 inches
  • Hopelawn: 10.5 inches
  • Avenel: 10.0 inches
  • Monroe / Rossmoor: 8.5 inches

Monmouth County

  • Union Beach: 16.0 inches
  • Holmdel: 13.5 inches
  • Belford: 12.0 inches
  • Keyport: 12.0 inches
  • Colts Neck: 11.5 inches
  • Freehold: 11.5 inches
  • Cliffwood: 11.0 inches
  • Hazlet: 11.0 inches
  • Manalapan: 9.8 inches
  • Marlboro: 9.5 inches
  • Eatontown: 8.7 inches
  • Keyport: 8.5 inches
  • Howell: 7.9 inches
  • Freehold Twp.: 7.7 inches
  • Atlantic Highlands: 6.8 inches
  • Deal: 6.5 inches
  • Long Branch: 6.0 inches
  • Leonardo: 5.0 inches
  • Wall Twp.: 5.0 inches

Morris County

  • Mendham: 30.0 inches (as of 7:20 p.m.)
  • Ledgewood: 26.0 inches
  • Long Valley: 26.0 inches
  • Randolph: 25.8 inches
  • Chester: 24.8 inches
  • Lake Hopatcong: 22.0 inches
  • Chatham: 20.3 inches
  • Green Pond: 20.0 inches
  • Netcong: 20.0 inches
  • Morris Twp.: 19.0 inches
  • Mendham: 18.5 inches
  • Flanders: 18.0 inches
  • Budd Lake: 17.0 inches
  • Long Hill Twp.: 16.0 inches
  • Montville: 15.0 inches
  • Morristown: 14.5 inches
  • Florham Park: 14.4 inches
  • Denville: 12.0 inches
  • Succasunna: 11.5 inches
  • Washington Twp.: 7.7 inches
  • East Hanover: 9.6 inches
  • Mountain Lakes: 9.5 inches

Ocean County

  • Jackson: 7.3 inches
  • Brick: 5.3 inches
  • Whiting: 5.0 inches
  • Forked River: 4.5 inches
  • Bayville: 4.0 inches
  • Toms River: 4.0 inches
  • Point Pleasant: 2.5 inches

Passaic County

  • Passaic: 15.9 inches
  • Bloomingdale: 15.7 inches
  • Totowa: 13.1 inches
  • West Milford: 12.3 inches
  • Wayne: 7.0 inches
  • Franklin Lakes: 6.0 inches
  • Little Falls: 5.6 inches
  • Hawthorne: 5.0 inches

Salem County

  • Pennsville: 4.0 inches
  • Pilesgrove: 3.3 inches
  • Woodstown: 2.8 inches
  • Salem: 2.5 inches

Somerset County

  • Warren Twp.: 22.0 inches
  • Bridgewater: 20.2 inches
  • Basking Ridge: 19.5 inches
  • Somerville: 19.0 inches
  • Warrenville: 18.5 inches
  • North Plainfield: 17.4 inches
  • Manville: 17.3 inches
  • Branchburg: 17.0 inches
  • Somerset: 17.0 inches
  • Green Brook: 15.0 inches
  • Watchung: 15.0 inches
  • Hillsborough: 11.8 inches

Sussex County

  • Sparta: 28.3 inches
  • Stanhope: 25.3 inches
  • Hopatcong: 24.0 inches
  • Stanhope: 24.0 inches
  • Byram Twp.: 22.5 inches
  • Wantage: 15.5 inches
  • Pellettown: 12.5 inches
  • Stockholm: 12.0 inches
  • Vernon: 11.9 inches

Union County

  • Westfield: 13.0 inches
  • Roselle Park: 12.8 inches
  • Plainfield: 12.0 inches
  • Cranford: 10.5 inches
  • Springfield: 10.5 inches
  • Elizabeth: 8.4 inches
  • New Providence: 7.0 inches

Warren County

  • Allamuchy- Panther Valley: 23.0 inches
  • Frelinghuysen: 16.7 inches
  • Hackettstown: 16.0 inches
  • Hope: 16.0 inches
  • Stewartsville: 15.8 inches

Current weather radar

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Len Melisurgo may be reached at LMelisurgo@njadvancemedia.com. Tell us your coronavirus story or send a tip here.

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