Convergence Blog | Weather Intelligence by AccuWeather for Business

Beast of a winter storm shatters century-old records, leaves region buried

Written by Becky DePodwin | Feb 9, 2021

At the end of January a storm tracked across the Plains and Midwest, reorganizing as a full-blown nor'easter along the mid-Atlantic coast during the first few days of February.

After a three-day snowstorm that likely felt like three years, a heavy blanket of record-breaking, deadly snowfall left a swath of heavy snow behind for an expansive area stretching from the upper Mississippi Valley to the Great Lakes, Ohio Valley and Northeast. 

The heaviest snowfall totals were observed in parts of far southern New York with 2+ feet, northeastern Pennsylvania and northern New Jersey where more than 30 inches of snow fell. The highest total was 36.1 inches in Nazareth, Pennsylvania.

Timeline

  • Clients were alerted as early as January 20 when AccuWeather's team of long-range meteorologists were discussing a new storm to watch that would develop in the Plains and spread a mess of snow and ice into the Appalachians and East through the end of January into February
  • Forecasts discussing the disruptive snowstorm were made available to the general public on January 26
  • An AccuWeather Local StormMax™ snowfall of 36 inches was predicted as early as January 28 

Storm's Impacts

The nor’easter caused significant disruptions to travel and caused some COVID-19 vaccination operations to shut down during the height of the storm. 

Southern New England states and eastern New Jersey dealt with a different kind of winter storm complication: coastal flooding and fierce winds. Footage captured in New Jersey towns such as Sea Bright and Sea Isle City showed multiple inches of water inundating roads and neighborhoods, rendering many streets impassable. 

While power outages were not a widespread issue, nearly 20,000 Massachusetts residents were temporarily left without power.

The ongoing snowfall and heavy winds forced dozens of cancellations at Logan International Airport in Boston, while gusts up to 75 mph were recorded in New Hampshire atop Mount Washington.

In Philadelphia, more than 450 pieces of snow equipment were deployed to clear the streets. Officials urged motorists to stay off the roads even as drivers continually found themselves losing control of their vehicles or stuck. At Philadelphia International Airport, nearly 8 inches of snow forced the cancellation of at least 130 flights, according to FlightAware.

The Science Behind the Storm

The storm’s slow pace caused this to be a long-duration event, producing impacts across an expansive region. 

Areas along the coast received more snow and gustier winds compared to inland regions of the Mid-Atlantic thanks to the center of low pressure stalling out near the Jersey Shore. Coastal areas were directly in line to receive an abundance of moisture, leaving parts of northern New Jersey, northeastern Pennsylvania and southeastern New York sitting under the heaviest snowfall for a longer-than-usual time, causing impressive snowfall amounts.

"Energy is essentially transferred from one low-pressure area in the Ohio Valley to another low-pressure area forming along the mid-Atlantic coast. This creates an elongated area of strong, easterly flow inland from the Atlantic Ocean, along which moisture can be transported, similar to the atmospheric rivers we see from the Pacific into the West Coast. This is what helped to bring prolonged snow so far west into portions of Ohio and Pennsylvania," AccuWeather Meteorologist Jake Sojda explained.

This storm alone brought nearly four times more snow than all of last season for New York, when fewer than 5 inches fell throughout the entire winter. 

With a storm event total of 17.2 inches of snow observed  in New York's Central Park, this storm ranks just outside of the top 10 biggest snowstorms.