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28 Μαρ 2019 · Winter temperature outlook for December-February 2018-2019 issued on November 15, 2018. The colors denote places where the forecast odds favor a much colder than usual winter (blue colors) or much warmer than usual winter (red), or where the probability of a cold winter, a warm winter, or a near-normal winter are all equal (white).
According to NOAA data analyzed by the Rutgers Global Snow Lab, the winter season (December 2018–February 2019), contiguous U.S. (CONUS) snow cover extent was 152,380 square miles above the 1981–2010 average and ranked as the 13 th highest in the 55-year period of record.
The Northern Tier of the U.S. received above-average snowfall during the 2018-2019 snow season. In Caribou, Maine, it was the snowiest January on record (59.8 inches). Caribou also broke another record for the most consecutive days with at least one inch of snow on the ground (163 days from November 10, 2018-April 21, 2019).
According to NOAA data analyzed by the Rutgers Global Snow Lab, for the winter season (December 2017-February 2018), the contiguous U.S. snow cover extent was 18,400 square miles below the 1981-2010 average and ranked near the middle of the 52-year period of record.
Winter weather struck in April in the north bringing records snows to Iowa, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. The storm had snow totals of more than 2 feet (61 cm) in many locations. Green Bay, Wisconsin set a record for its snowiest April on record 36.7 inches (93 cm) which also ranked as the 2nd snowiest month all-time (December 2008).
Find daily records of high and low temperature and precipitation for most localities in the United States. Display different variables to look for patterns and compare them among different dates. Answer questions such as: Where did it rain or snow on a specific date? How does temperature change with latitude?
December 2019 began with 41 percent of the CONUS covered by snow. By mid-month, snow cover peaked for December at 48.4 percent. Snow extended from the Intermountain West into the northern Plains and Great Lakes and from the central Plains to New England.