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January 31, 2005

January closes having failed to produce 0° in the city

January 2005, which ended at midnight last night, failed to produce a single official 0° reading. Only 30 other Januarys in the city over the past 135 years have done that! Despite the month’s 29.1” of snow at Midway Airport, the fourth heaviest there since observations began in 1928, the month’s 24.5° average temperature finished 2.5° above normal.
The Midwest’s access to frigid arctic air has been severed for the time being by a shift in the jet stream pattern across North America. Gone are the northwest steering winds responsible for the chill of recent weeks. Two westerly jet streams are now in place—one over the Gulf, the other in southern Canada—each bypassing Chicago and Midwest. It’s a pattern which is to allow a sprawling high pressure to sit over the region the remainder of the week.
Kansas City was hit by snow early Monday—up to 10” of it in that city’s southern suburbs. The eastbound disturbance dissipated before reaching Chicago.

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CHICAGO AIR QUALITY LEVELS DETERIORATE

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RIME ICE VS. HOARFROST

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January 30, 2005

Snowy January ending on a mild tranquil note

Chicago is transitioning to February in the midst of a milder, tranquil weather pattern after a very snowy month that brought two major snowstorms to the city. Temperatures topped the freezing mark both days this weekend and the week ahead promises more melting as temps push 40º by the end of the week. Were it not for the remnant snow pack on the ground, temperatures in the upcoming week would be headed for 50º instead of the expected highs in the 30s and lower 40s. The mild weather will not last however, and wintry conditions are expected to return by next weekend as a shift in the jet stream brings a blast of arctic air followed by a trailing clipper system that could bring the city another round of snow.

More than a hundred thousand residents of the Southeast remained without power in the wake of a major ice storm that raked the area over the weekend. However, rebounding temps are expected to quickly remove all traces of the weekend glazing.

• View all January 2005 entries

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