![]() ![]() ![]() Therefore, one hour in winter time and two in summer time have to be added for local time. Six-hourly intervals or greater correspond to UTC times. Variables accumulated in one hour (maximum gust, precipitation and snow) are related to the next hour (for example, the precipitation at 09:00 corresponds to the accumulated precipitation between 09:00 and 10:00). The local time for which all instantaneous variables are predicted is the one shown in the timeline. The "Hourly weather forecast" shows the hour by hour-information up to 48 hours after the moment numerical models are updated (00,06,12,and 18 UTC), while the "7-Day weather forecast" reaches the whole period. They must be considered as the more probable tendency of the meteorological evolution for the next 7 days. MARCH 11TH, 1911-Tamarack CA reported 451 inches of snow on the ground, a record for the U.S.Weather forecasts for 8124 locations in Spain. Four feet of snow covered the ground at Inwood following the storm. MARCH 11TH, 1962-One of the most paralyzing snowstorms in decades produced record March snowfalls in Iowa. ![]() New York City received 20.9 inches of snow, Albany NY reported 46.7 inches. The blizzard was followed by record cold temperatures, and the cold and snow claimed 400 lives. The storm produced 58 inches of snow at Saratoga NY, and 50 inches at Middletown CT. MARCH 12TH, 1888-A blizzard paralyzed southeastern New York State and western New England. Winds of 90 mph closed mountain passes, heavy rains flooded the lowlands, and in sixty hours Squaw Valley CA was buried under 96 inches (eight feet) of snow. MARCH 12TH, 1967-A tremendous four day storm raged across California. In southwest Texas, the temperature at Sanderson soared from 46 degrees at 8 AM to 90 degrees at 11 AM. The record high of 88 degrees at Tucson AZ was their seventh in a row. Unseasonably warm weather continued in the southwestern U.S. viewed a once in a life-time display of the "Northern Lights". MARCH 13TH, 1989-Residents of the southern U.S. The storm buried Iowa City under 27 inches of snow. MARCH 13TH, 1951-The state of Iowa experienced a record snowstorm. MARCH 14TH, 1870-The term "blizzard" was first applied to a storm which produced heavy snow and high winds in Minnesota and Iowa. Soil erosion in northwest Kansas damaged nearly five million acres of wheat. Winds gusting to 72 mph at Hill City KS reduced the visibility to a city block in blowing dust. High winds in the Central Plains sharply reduced visibilities in blowing dust as far east as Kansas City MO. MARCH 14TH, 1989-High winds in Colorado and Wyoming gusted above 120 mph at Horsetooth Heights CO. Unseasonably cold weather prevailed in the southeastern U.S., with forty-one cities reporting record low temperatures for the date. MARCH 15TH, 1988-More than one hundred hours of continuous snow finally came to an end at Marquette MI, during which time the city was buried under 43 inches of snow. A cold front traveling 30 mph crossed Minnesota in just seven hours. Snow drifts twelve feet high were reported in north central Minnesota. Winds gusted to 75 mph at Duluth MN, and reached 85 mph at Grand Forks ND. ![]() The blizzard hit on a Saturday night while many are traveling, and thus claimed 71 lives. MARCH 15TH, 1941-The most severe blizzard in modern history struck North Dakota and Minnesota. MARCH 16TH, 1975-A single storm brought 119 inches of snow to Crater Lake OR establishing a state record. Three persons were injured when hailstones crashed through a shopping mall skylight. MARCH 16TH, 1987-Softball size hail caused millions of dollars damage to automobiles at Del Rio TX. ![]()
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