January 2019 North American winter storm

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FormedJanuary 16, 2019
DissipatedJanuary 21, 2019
Highest winds
  • 132 mph (212 km/h) at Mammoth Mountain, California
January 2019 North American winter storm
Category 1 "Notable" (RSI/NOAA: 2.83)
TypeExtratropical
Winter storm
Ice storm
Tornado outbreak
FormedJanuary 16, 2019
DissipatedJanuary 21, 2019
Highest winds
  • 132 mph (212 km/h) at Mammoth Mountain, California
Highest gust164 mph (264 km/h) at Mammoth Mountain, California
Tornadoes
confirmed
10
Max. rating1EF2 tornado
Maximum snowfall
or ice accretion
52 inches (130 cm) at Squaw Valley, California
Fatalities10
Power outages100,000+
Areas affectedSouthwestern United States, Rocky Mountains, Midwest, Northeastern United States, Eastern Canada

1Most severe tornado damage; see Enhanced Fujita scale

The January 2019 North American winter storm was a long-lived winter storm, forming as a large area of low pressure off the Pacific Northwest shoreline January 16, making its way to the Northeast by January 21. Its effects included heavy rain/high elevation snow and gusty winds in California, severe weather in the south, near-blizzard conditions in Upstate New York, an ice storm in New England and minor coastal flooding in the Mid-Atlantic.[1]

A large area of low pressure formed just off the coast of the Pacific Northwest on January 16, before making landfall in California on January 17. Very heavy, high-elevation snow fell in the Sierra Nevada and Rocky Mountain ranges. The storm tracked across the Great Plains and through the Midwest before delivering heavy snow to the mountains of Upstate New York and Northern New England, eventually moving through Atlantic Canada and drifting out to sea. The winter storm was unofficially named Winter Storm Harper by The Weather Channel.[2]

Impacts

See also

References

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