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{{Infobox winter storm|name=Storm of the Century (1993)|image location=Storm of the century satellite.gif|image name=Satellite image by NASA of the superstorm on March 13, 1993, at 10:01
Coordinated Universal Time.|stormtype=
Cyclone blizzard,
Nor'easter, [1993, [1993, North Carolina|pressure=960 [millibar (hectopascal)|total damages (USD)=$6-10 billion (
2005 United States dollar) |total fatalities=300 total|areas affected=Most of eastern and southern North America-->
The
Storm of the Century, also known as the
’93 Superstorm,
No-Name Hurricane, the
White Hurricane, or the (
Great)
Blizzard of 1993, was a large
cyclone storm that occurred on
March 12–
March 15,
1993, on the East Coast of North America. It is unique for its intensity, massive size and wide-reaching effect. At its height the
storm stretched from
Canada to
Central America, but its main impact was on the
Eastern United States and
Cuba. Areas as far south as central Alabama and Georgia received 4 to 6 inches of
snow and areas such as
Birmingham, Alabama, received up to 12 inches with isolated reports of 16 inches. Even the Florida Panhandle reported up to 2 inches, with
hurricane-force wind gusts and record low
barometric pressures. Between
Florida and
Cuba, hurricane-force winds produced extreme storm surges in the
Gulf of Mexico, which along with scattered tornadoes killed dozens of people.
Formation
A "disorganized
low pressure area" that formed in the Gulf of Mexico (the Gulf is warm by March, and thus is a frequent source of spring snowstorms) joined an
arctic high pressure system in the
Midwestern Great Plains, brought into the mid-latitudes by an unusually steep southward jet stream. These factors combined to produce unusually cold
temperatures across the eastern half of the United States.
Forecasting
The 1993 Storm of the Century marked a milestone in U.S. weather forecasting. By March 8 (and by some accounts even earlier), several operational numerical weather prediction models and medium-range Meteorologist at the US National Weather Service recognized the threat of a significant
snowstorm on March 13-
March 14. This was the first time that National Weather Service employees were able to so precisely predict the severity of an oncoming storm five days in advance, and issue blizzard warnings two days in advance. Because of newer computer and forecasting technology, forecasters were confident enough to allow several northeastern U.S. States to declare a
State of Emergency before the snow even started to fall.
Temperatures a few days before the storm were more typical across the Southeast for early March, and though large fluctuations in temperature are normal in the deep south, this caused some less attentive residents to doubt that freezing temperatures would return rapidly and that snow was right around the corner. Certainly the fact that it doesn't snow very often or very much in the deep south added to the disbelief. In addition, many TV news stations were reluctant to forecast too much snow to the deep-southern public, until it was definite, due to the unbelievability of the sheer numbers being predicted by the computer models (which were right) and an uncertain public reaction.
The storm
During Friday, temperatures over much of the eastern United States began to fall quickly. The area of low pressure rapidly intensified during the day on Friday and moved into northwest Florida by early Saturday morning. As this happened snow began to spread over the eastern United States, and a large squall line moved from over the Gulf of Mexico into Florida and Cuba. The low tracked up the east coast during the day on Saturday and into Canada by early Monday morning.
The blizzard
Temperatures accompanying the storm were unseasonably cold for early
spring (season): average daily maximum temperatures, in mid-March, are around 46°F (8°C) in
Boston, 51°F (11°C) in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and 65°F (18°C) in Atlanta. During the 1993 storm, these places were all near or below freezing, and parts of New England saw daily maximum temperatures as low as 14°F (-10°C). Record low temperatures for March were recorded in much of the Southern U.S. Farther to the South, numerous supercells developed over the state of Florida, spawning eleven tornadoes and killing seven people.
This storm complex was massive, affecting at least 26 United States states and much of eastern Canada. Bringing cold air along with heavy precipitation and hurricane force winds, it caused a blizzard over much of the area it affected. The storm brought snow as far south as northern Florida, thundersnow from Texas to Pennsylvania, and Whiteout (weather) conditions. Some affected areas saw more than 3.5 feet (1.0 m) of snow, and snowdrifts were as high as 35 feet (10.0 m). Central and Southern
Florida saw no snow, but
tornadoes and severe thunderstorms, resultant from the storm, occurred there and in Cuba. Responsible for 300 deaths and the loss of electricity to over 10 million, it is purported to have been directly experienced by over 130 million people in the United States, about half the country's population at that time. Every airport from Halifax Urban Area to
Atlanta, Georgia was closed for some time because of the storm. The
volume of the storm's total snowfall was later computed to be 12.91 mi³ (53.96 km³), an amount which would weigh (depending on the variable
density of snow) between 5.4 and 27 billion
tonnes.
Barometric pressures recorded during the storm were also unusually low: readings of 28.35
inchmercury (element) (960 millibar or hPa) were observed in New England. Usually, such low readings are observed only in
hurricanes (generally of Category 2 or 3 intensity on the
Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale), which peak at almost the exact opposite time of year, or in other cyclonic storms far out to sea. It also pushed a
storm surge ashore on the
Florida panhandle,
drowning a few people taken by surprise at the storm's ferocity. (This incident is featured occasionally on reruns of
Storm Stories.)
As one of the most powerful storms in recent history, the storm has been described as the "Storm of the 20th century" by many of the areas affected. The last blizzard to have such an effect on the Southeast was the
Great Blizzard of 1899.
Subtropical derecho
Besides producing record low barometric pressure across a swath of the Southeast and
Mid-Atlantic states, and one of the nation's biggest snowstorms, the low produced a potent squall line ahead of its weather front. The squall line produced a serial derecho as it moved into Florida and Cuba around midnight on March 13. Straight-line winds gusted above 100 mph/85 kts (160 km/h) at many locations in
Florida as the squall line moved through.
A substantial
storm surge was also generated along the gulf coast from Appalachee Bay in the Florida panhandle all the way around to
Southwest Florida. Especially hard hit was
Hernando County north of
Tampa, Florida, where the coast faces northwest; right into the teeth of the approaching squall (see map).
Storm surges there reached up to 12 feet; higher than many hurricanes. With little advanced warning of incoming severe conditions, some coastal residents were awakened in the early morning of March 13th to find the waters of the
Gulf of Mexico rushing into their homes.http://www2.sptimes.com/weather/SW.3.3.html Overall, the storm's surge, winds, and tornados damaged or destroyed 18,000 homes and killed at least 26 people in Florida.http://www2.sptimes.com/weather/SW.3.html
,
1993.The
supercells in the derecho produced ten tornadoes in the United States. One tornado killed three people when it struck a home which later collapsed, pinning the occupants under a fallen wall.
In Cuba, wind gusts reached 100 mph (160 km/h) in the Havana area. A survey conducted by a research team from the Institute of Meteorology of Cuba suggests that the maximum winds could have been as high as 130 mph (210 km/h). It is the most damaging squall line ever recorded in Cuba.
There was widespread and significant damage in Cuba, with damages estimated as intense as
Fujita scale. The squall line finally moved out of Cuba near sunrise, leaving 10 deaths and US$1 billion in damage on the island.
In the image above, measured gusts in mph are plotted (blue numbers). "+" symbols indicate the locations of wind damage or estimated wind gusts above severe limits (58 mph or greater). Red dots and paths indicate tornado events. Small red numbers indicate tornado intensities in F-scale. The approximate location of the squall line "gust front" is shown in two hour increments (curved purple lines).
Tornado Table
Impact
.In
U.S. Southern states, where public works facilities (in most areas) generally have no reason to be prepared for snow removal, the storm is vividly remembered because it resulted in a complete shutdown of that region for three days. Cities that usually receive little snowfall, such as Chattanooga, Tennessee, received anywhere from 2 to 4 feet of snow, causing some municipalities to adopt at least an emergency winter-weather plan for the future where one may not have existed before. The psychological impact in the Southern states, where average high temperatures in March tend to run into the 60s Fahrenheit (the upper teens Celsius), was magnified by the fact that it struck a week before spring. A NASCAR event at Atlanta Motor Speedway (the
Motorcraft 500) had to be postponed a week due to the storm;
Birmingham, Alabama recorded a record low of 2 degrees fahrenheit during the storm.
Syracuse, New York, which is accustomed to heavy snowfall, received a record 43 inches from the storm, while snowfall totalled over 12 inches in
New York City and 2 feet of snow fell in Hartford, Connecticut and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
,
1993.The weight of record snows
collapsed many factory
roofs in the South, and snowdrifts on the windward sides of buildings caused a few
deck (building) with substandard
anchors to fall from homes. Though the storm was forecast to strike the snow-prone
Appalachian Mountains, hundreds of people were nonetheless rescued from the Appalachians, many caught completely off-guard on the Appalachian Trail, or visiting cottage#Cottages in North Americas and lodges in remote locales. The heaviest snow recorded was at
Newfound Gap, where U.S. 441 crosses the Tennessee and
North Carolina border, with five feet (1.5 m); drifts up to 14 feet (4.3 m) were observed at Mount Mitchell. Snowfall totals of between 2 and 3 feet were widespread across northwestern North Carolina.
Boone, North Carolina — in a high-elevation area accustomed to heavy snowfalls — was nonetheless caught off guard by 24 hours of below zero Fahrenheit temperatures along with storm winds, which (according to National Climatic Data Center storm summaries) gusted as high as 110 miles per hour. Electricity was not restored to many isolated
rural areas for a week or more, with power outages occurring all over the east. Nearly 60,000 lightning strikes were recorded as the storm swept over the country, for a total of seventy-two hours, and many may remember their local news organizations touting the term "
thundersnow."
Overall, the
Blizzard of 1993 caused a total of $6.6 billion of damage.
Across the U.S. Northeast and eastern Canadian provinces, the storm put down an average of 15 inches (40 cm) of snow, which, though most certainly heavy, is not legendary by most local standards, but still somewhat unusual for mid-March, especially for the southernmost parts of the region such as the Baltimore-Washington area.
New England residents tend to point to the Northeastern United States Blizzard of 1978 as their "storm of the century," due largely to its unrelenting snowfall, which managed to incapacitate the weather-hardened region, while
Mid-Atlantic States residents tend to point to the
Blizzard of 1996 for similar reasons. Based on widespread effects, barometric pressures, wind speeds and satellite images, however, there is little doubt that the storm of 1993 was the more remarkable.
Storm amounts
{|class=wikitable style="align: left;"|-!colspan=2 style="text-align: center;"|Storm Snow Totals
Totals are for the main system only.|-|
Mount LeConte| 60 in (152.4 cm) |-|
Mount Mitchell| 50 in (127 cm) |-|Snowshoe, West Virginia| 44 in (111.8 cm) |-|Syracuse, New York| 43 in (109.2 cm) |-|Latrobe, Pennsylvania| 36 in (91.4 cm) |-|
Lincoln, New Hampshire|35 in (88.9 cm) |-|
Albany, New York| 27 in (68.6 cm) |-|
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania| 25 in (63.5 cm) |-|
Hartford, Connecticut| 24 in (61 cm)|-|London, Kentucky| 22 in (55.9 cm)|-|Chattanooga, Tennessee| 20 in (50.8 cm) |-|Asheville, North Carolina|19 in (48.2 cm) |-|
Ottawa, Ontario| 17.7 in (45 cm) |-|
Birmingham, Alabama| 17 in (43 cm) |-|
Montreal, Quebec|16.1 in (41 cm) |-|Washington, D.C.| 12 in (30.5 cm)|-|[Atlanta, Georgia| 4 in (10.1 cm) |-|
Mobile, Alabama| 3 in (7.6 cm) |-|}
See also
- List of notable derecho events
References
External links
- NWS Service Assessment
- The Big One! A Review of the March 12-14, 1993 "Storm of the Century" (PDF)
- Summary of the Subtropical Derecho (NOAA)