5 Images to Illustrate the Blizzard of 2015

A pictorial guide to the storm that just shut down the U.S. East Coast


The blizzard of 2015 brought less snow than expected to New York City. 
Credit: @PANYNJ
City dwellers in New York hoping to wake up to mountains of snow will have to content themselves with trawling Instagram pictures from New England. The blizzard of 2015—or really the #blizzardof2015 if we're doing this right—brought less snow than expected to New York City and a number of points south. But to the east on Long Island and north throughout New England, the storm has lived up to, and in some ways exceeded, expectations with heavy snow and coastal flooding.
Snow totals are still being updated but as of Tuesday morning, a National Weather Service weather spotter has reported the highest total from the storm so far, with 30 inches in Framingham, Mass. Other central Massachusetts and South Shore locations have also piled up more than 2 feet of snow.
The second-highest snow total comes 28.5 inches measured in Orient, N.Y., on the far eastern tip of Long Island. In both places, wind gusts are piling up drifts and sending snow cresting over the eaves of houses. 
Boston has also received 14.5 inches and more than another foot of snow isn't out of the question for the city by the end of the day. Windblown snow drifts are starting to clog streets and bury cars across the city.
Probably a good thing for folks who decided to ski into work this morning like the staff at PRI's The World.  
The wintery conditions also made it ideal for Boston's local Yeti population to come out of hibernation. Photo evidence has emerged though researchers have yet to bring one in for testing.
Areas south of the city including Cape Cod and Nantucket received 12-20 inches of snow from the blizzard, but coastal flooding has caused far more damage to the region. Reports of 4-5 feet of storm surge have flooded streets, cut power to tens of thousands and damaged homes.
In comparison, New York and points south and west got off easy. The weather station in Central Park has recorded about 8 inches of snow while further south, Philadelphia received just 2 inches from the storm that some forecast to drop as much as 2 feet on the area. The initial forecast led to the unprecedented closing of the New York subway system due to winter weather and a travel ban after 11 p.m. on Monday. Those measures made for eerie photos of a rare empty New York City.
Subway trains ran empty overnight, to ghostly effect, and normally bustling hubs were all but abandoned.
But even if NYC didn't get the epic amounts of snow initially forecast, what snow did fall made for some very pretty sights.
This article is reproduced with permission from Climate Central. The article wasfirst published on January 27, 2015.




Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Climate Change Skeptics Lash Out At New Global Warming ‘Hiatus’ Study That Questions Ocean Temperature Measurements

Global warming could drive world temperatures up 7 degrees by 2100

Why Is Critical Technology to Stop Global Warming Stalled?