Blizzard.html

 
ca de en es fr it nl no pl pt ru ro fi sv tr vo


 

A blizzard is a severe winter storm condition characterized by low temperatures, strong winds, and heavy blowing snow. Blizzards are formed when a high pressure system, also known as a ridge, interacts with a low pressure system; this results in the advection of air from the high pressure zone into the low pressure area. The term blizzard is sometimes misused by news media to describe a large winter storm that does not actually satisfy official blizzard criteria.

Part of the Nature series on
Weather
 
Seasons

Spring · Summer
Autumn · Winter

Dry season
Wet season

Storms

Thunderstorm · Tornado
Tropical cyclone (Hurricane)
Extratropical cyclone
Winter storm · Blizzard
Ice storm

Precipitation

Fog · Drizzle · Rain
Freezing rain · Ice pellets
Hail · Snow · Graupel

Topics

Meteorology
Weather forecasting
Climate · Air pollution

Weather Portal
 v  d  e 

Contents

Geography

Even though some areas are more likely to experience blizzards than others, it is possible for a blizzard to occur in any location where there is snow and high winds. In North America, blizzards are particularly common to the extreme portions of the Northeastern United States, the Northern Great Plains in the United States, Atlantic Canada, and the Canadian Prairie Provinces. Blizzard conditions also occur frequently in the mountain ranges in western North America, however since these regions are sparsely populated they are often not reported.

Worldwide, blizzards often occur across Russia, and into the northern reaches of Europe. It has been also known to occur across the United Kingdom as well, although significant winter storms there are less common due to the maritime influences of the Northern Atlantic Ocean.

Definition

Blizzards are associated with dangerous road conditions.

According to Environment Canada, a winter storm must have winds of 40 km/h (25 mph) or more, have snow or blowing snow, visibility less than 1 km (about 58 mile), a wind chill of less than −25 °C (−13 °F), and that all of these conditions must last for 4 hours or more before the storm can be properly called a blizzard.

In the United States, the National Weather Service defines a blizzard as sustained 35 mph (56 km/h) winds which lead to blowing snow and cause visibilities of ¼ mile or less, lasting for at least 3 hours. Temperature is not taken into consideration when issuing a blizzard warning, but the nature of these storms is such that cold air is often present when the other criteria are met.1

Other countries, such as the UK, have a lower threshold: the Met Office defines a blizzard as "moderate or heavy snow" combined with a mean wind speed of 30 mph (48 km/h) and visibility below 650 feet (200 m).

When there are blizzard conditions but no snow falling, meteorologists call this a ground blizzard because all the snow is already present at the surface of the earth and is simply being blown by high winds. Ground blizzards require large expanses of open and relatively flat land with a sufficient amount of accumulated and loosely packed, powdery snow to be blown around.

The origin of the word "blizzard" was used to describe a brutal snow storm that lashed the open prarie by O.C. Bates. Bates was the Editor of the Estherville, Iowa newspaper the Vindicator and he couldn't think of a word forceful enough to describe the late blinding snow storm in April of 1871. So "blizzard" was given meaning from that day forward.(Esther's Town-Deemer Lee-Iowa State University Press-Ames 1980-Page 28-Paragraph 3.)

Whiteouts

When the sky and the ground on the earth are indifferent and cannot be seen as the same.

Etymology

The Word 'Blizzard' was first used in 1870 during a severe snowstorm in Iowa and Minnesota, by an Estherville, Iowa newspaper. The word has its origins in boxing, referring to a volley of punches in Boxing. The word was first used by the USA signal corps weather service in 1876.

Notable blizzards in the USA

A snowbound locomotive, photographed on March 29, 1881, in western Minnesota.

The Great Blizzard of 1888 paralyzed the Northeastern United States for several days. In that blizzard, 400 people were killed, 200 ships were sunk, and snowdrifts towered 15 to 50 feet high. Earlier that year, the Great Plains states were struck by the Schoolhouse Blizzard that left children trapped in schoolhouses and killed 235 people.

The Midwestern Armistice Day Blizzard in 1940 caught many people off guard with its rapid and extreme temperature change. It was 60 °F in the morning, but by noon, it was snowing heavily. Some of those caught unprepared died by freezing to death in the snow and some while trapped in their cars. Altogether, 154 people died in the Armistice Day Blizzard. Unpredictable storms such as this one can come without much warning, causing damage and destruction to humans and infrastructure.

One hundred five years March 12 after the Great Blizzard of 1888, a massive blizzard, nicknamed the Storm of the Century, hit the U.S in 1993. It dropped snow over 26 states and reached as far north as Canada and as far south as Mexico. In many Southern United States Southern U.S. areas, such as parts of Alabama, more snow fell in this storm than ever fell in an averagely recorded in any winter yet. Highways and airports were closed across the United States Of America. As a wider effect, the storm spawned 15 tornadoes in Florida. When the storm was over, it affected a quarter of the U.S. population; 270 people died and 48 were reported presumed dead at sea.

References

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
All Right Reserved © 2007, Designed by Stylish Blog.
  GotLink