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November 30, 2005

December’s first week to average 12° below normal

Thursday’s 27° high was the chilliest close to a meteorological autumn here in 22 years—since a 24° high on Nov. 30, 1983. That this past season closed as chilly as it did is ironic, considering the three month period from September through November finished well above normal—the 19th warmest of any since 1871.
The chill sets the tone for December’s opening week, expected to average nearly 12° below normal. North winds behind a series of vigorous, snow-producing disturbances predicted to sweep the area in the coming week, pull successively colder lobes of arctic air into the Midwest off a vast reservoir of frigid air which covers the central U.S. and north. These cold pushes promise to produce a succession of daily temperature deficits through at least next week. If predicted temperatures verify over the next seven days, December, 2005’s opening may rank among the Top 10 coldest on the books here.

Temperature Update

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Three Snow Systems

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Naming Tropical Storms Outside of Season

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November 29, 2005

December’s snowiest open in 26 years possible

Despite Wednesday’s emerging sunshine, the arrival of new clouds later today signals the approach of what is likely to be the first in a series of snow systems starting late Wednesday night. By Thursday morning, as December 2005 and the first hours of meteorological winter arrive, 1-2” of snow may fall. Given the strong upper air features and cold temperatures accompanying this system, it’s even possible a few 2-3” totals may occur. Such accumulations would be the heaviest recorded the first day of December since 2.7” fell 26 years ago in 1979.
Factoring in the day’s blustery SW winds, Tuesday’s temperature plunge produced a level of chill which felt 44° colder. Actual thermometer readings plummeted from 61° to 28° in just 30 hours from noon Monday to 6 p.m. Tuesday. The pullback was the equivalent of the decline in normal temperatures which takes place between late October and mid-January.
--Tom Skilling

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