Weather History
For Monday,February 13,2017
For Monday,February 13,2017
1784
- Ice floes blocked the Mississippi River at New Orleans, then passed
into the Gulf of Mexico. The only other time this occurred was during
the "Great Arctic Outbreak" of 1899. (David Ludlum)
1885
- The "Friday the 13th" avalanche at Alva, UT, killed sixteen persons,
and left thirteen others buried for twelve hours before being rescued.
(David Ludlum)
1889
- It was the coldest morning of record along the Gulf Coast. The
temperature dipped to 7 above zero at New Orleans LA and Pensacola FL,
and plunged to -1 degree at Mobile AL. The mercury dipped to -2 degrees
at Tallahassee, the coldest reading of record for the state of Florida.
(David Ludlum)
1905
- Morning lows of -29 degrees at Pond AR, -40 degrees at Lebanon KS,
and -40 degrees at Warsaw MO established all-time records for those
three states. (The Weather Channel)
1987
- A storm in the western U.S. produced heavy rain over central
California. Chews Ridge reported nearly eleven inches of rain in 24
hours, and extensive flooding occurred in San Benito County. The Mount
Rose ski resort in Nevada experienced a "white-out" with 60 mph winds
and 36 inches of snow. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
1988
- Strong winds in the wake of a storm in the northeastern U.S., gusting
to 60 mph at Oswego NY, produced six foot snow drifts in northeastern
Ohio. High winds in the mountains of Utah, gusting to 106 mph at the
Snowbird ski resort, contributed to a forty car pile-up on Interstate
15, near the town of Bluffdale. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm
Data)
1989
- Showers and thunderstorms produced locally heavy rain and flash
flooding from central Texas to western Pennsylvania. Up to ten inches of
rain deluged western Kentucky in two days, with five day totals ranging
up to 13.16 inches at Gilbertsville Dam KY. Flooding caused tens of
millions of dollars damage, including 18 million dollars damage at
Frankfort KY. (The National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
1990
- A slow moving cold front brought heavy snow to Utah, Colorado and
Wyoming. Big Horn WY reported 15 inches of snow, and up to 22 inches was
reported in Utah. In Colorado, 8 to 12 inches of snow fell over the
northwest suburbs of Denver, while 16 to 22 inches was reported in the
high mountain elevations west of Fort Collins. Strong winds accompanied
the heavy snow, and bitter cold weather followed in its wake. (The
National Weather Summary) (Storm Data)
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