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Uncategorized Wednesday, February 24th 2010 at 6:01 pm

The Coming Winter Storm is Called “Snowicane,” In Case You Were Wondering

The same totemistic forces that named the last bout of bad Northeastern weather  ”Snowmageddon” and “Snowpocalypse” have converged upon a new name for the coming winter storms: “Snowicane.”

ABC News, the Ithaca Journal, and affiliated Gannett newspapers unite in giving the latest bout of storms, which could drop from one to two feet of snow in some areas, the “Snowicane” handle. The reason: in addition to an onslaught of snow, Northeasterners can expect wind speeds of up to 70 miles per hour. The cutoff for hurricane force is 75 mph.

ABC News explains the wintery barrage:

In some places wind gusts of up to 70 mph were forecast — notable, considering that 75 mph winds in summer are considered hurricane-force.

Storms this time of year tend to follow each other. There was widespread snow in the Northeast on Tuesday.

Why such a rough winter? It is a combination of factors, said forecasters. There is an El Nino — a warm patch of water in the Pacific that adds steamy air to the jet streams blowing over it, generally bringing stormy weather to the American west. Two other periodic patterns — one called the Arctic Oscillation and the other called the North Atlantic Oscillation — are both sending colder-than-usual air toward the eastern part of the U.S. from northern latitudes.

(h/t Fark)

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  • alimaamoser

    Will New England snowdrifts be bigger than Al Gore’s ego after the snowicane?
    Winds well over 75mph (category 1 hurricane) and two feet of NEW snow on top of several feet already on the ground equals big snowdrifts, but how big???ultimate max burn

  • aidriiyan

    GLOBAL WARMING!

  • albertstephensen

    I would like to suggest that this storm be known as Blizzaricane, instead of Snowicane. I would also like to suggest that we refer to global warming as climate change, instead. This way, no matter what the weather is, we’re right!

  • Susana Polo

    @albert

    I wholeheartedly support any initiative that makes seasonal weather phenomena sound more like the Superman villain Bizzaro.