Winter '15 / '16 - Coastal Teaser #2
A little past the halfway point of meteorological winter ... another coastal teaser lurks on the horizon.
Snowfall forecasting contests for 27 stations across New England and the Mid-Atlantic regions ... since 1999
A little past the halfway point of meteorological winter ... another coastal teaser lurks on the horizon.
Maybe DEC 2015 won't go into the record books as not having a single contest-worthy snow storm.
Progs depict weak cyclogenesis this weekend over southern TX and a track to the NE well west of the Appalachian mountains with half-hearted secondary development off the Delmarva a few days later.
Retreating and weakening Arctic HIGH over SE CN would support a layer a slop along the coast with plowable snows inland.
NWP image courtesy meteocentre.com
---
NEWxSFC's historian reports four of 16 DECs without a contest-worthy storm (winters ending: '00, '07, '12, '15).
Season-total snowfall totals ... P-O-R-N ... and PCT of P-O-R-N
'99 - '00 (unavailable - no season-total contest)
'06 - '07 617" / 926" (67%)
'11 - '12 393" / 934" (42%)
'14 - '15 1,336" / 934" (143%)
Not a good sign but too soon to abandon all hope.
14 forecasters + P-O-R-N + CONSENSUS
375 station forecasts
ABSTRACT:
"Climate in the North Pacific and North American sectors has experienced interdecadal shifts during the 20th century. A network of recently developed tree-ring chronologies for Southern and Baja California extends the instrumental record, and reveals decadal-scale variability back to AD 1661.
"The Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) is closely matched by the dominant mode of tree-ring variability, which provides a preliminary view of multi-annual climate fluctuations spanning the past four centuries. The reconstructed PDO index features a prominent bidecadal oscillation, whose amplitude weakened in the late 1700s to mid-1800s.
"A comparison with proxy records of ENSO suggests that the greatest decadal-scale oscillations in Pacific climate between 1706 and 1977 occurred around 1750, 1905, and 1947."