Anchorage breaks seasonal snowfall record
April 8, 2012 -- Updated 1210 GMT (2010 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Anchorage has had more than 133 inches of snow for the 2011-2012 season
- This breaks the previous snowfall record for a season, set 57 years ago
- The U.S. overall saw less snow, with the 4th least snow cover recorded
Some 3.4 inches of snow
-- and counting -- had fallen as of 4 p.m. (8 p.m. ET) Saturday in
Anchorage, according to the National Weather Service.
That brought the seasonal total for the city to 133.6 inches -- breaking the record of 132.6 inches, set in 1954-1955.
And with snow continuing to fall into early Sunday morning, the figure promises to get even larger.
"Okay...now the records
broken, could you please make the snow go away??!!" wrote one commenter
of the Facebook page of the weather service's Alaska division.
Another said, "Oh, it's
not chilly. I'm wearing a tee-shirt and shorts while cooking outside and
enjoying this beautiful springtime weather @ 35 degrees."
While snow is nothing new
to Alaskans, this year's record haul in Anchorage is notable given that
the average seasonal snowfall is 74.5 inches.
And it's also striking
considering that, elsewhere in the United States, this past winter was
known more for its warmth than its white stuff.
Across the United States,
the 2011-2012 winter season was the fourth warmest ever recorded,
according to the National Climatic Data Center.
The agency's report,
issued in March, found that a relative dearth of snow throughout the
contiguous United States contributed to snow cover levels in North
America being the fourth lowest since such records were first kept.
Still, as much as
Anchorage residents can revel in being standouts when it comes to snow
in their country, they hardly merit top billing in their own state.
Other record-setters in
the state include Haines, a community about 92 miles north of Juneau
that saw about 360 inches of snow for the 2011-2012 season -- smashing
the previous record of 309 inches set five years ago, according to the
weather service. end quote from:
http://edition.cnn.com/2012/04/08/us/alaska-record-snowfall/
Basically this is twice the normal snowfall for Anchorage, Alaska. We have also had an unusual weather pattern from California North into Oregon and Washington and beyond. Lately there have been storms that have been spiraling north and hitting California to Oregon and northward and then spiraling back out into the Pacific Ocean but not traveling across the U.S. eastward which has been the prevailing direction for storms in the past. But then, weather isn't really normal anywhere this year.
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