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Monday, February 8, 2010

Welcome Weather Underground Visitors
Some Further Thoughts on Super Storm 2010

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Welcome Wundergrounders, and thank you Jeff Masters for your generous compliment. I've been a fan of Weather Underground since the earliest days of the WWW. Along with UIUC Weather World, it was one of my first bookmarks on Netscape 0.5.

I'd like to take this opportunity to endorse Dr. Masters' commentary on the relative significance of moisture and temperature in monster winter events and try to expand the discussion a bit. Every individual weather event is unique in its own way, and extreme events, by definition, are even more unique; otherwise, they wouldn't be rare. However, there are also a lot of similarities. In these days of increasingly accurate computer models (and this latest event was very well captured as much as 6 days out), it may seem old-fashioned, but looking at analogs, or similar situations from the past, can be very instructive. Considering the historic nature of this storm, I went back and looked at the weather maps for the other record February snowstorms of the past century in Washington. Overall (and somewhat simplified), the basic elements and their evolution were very similar to what we've all come to expect from these situations:
  • a low pressure area generally originating in or near the Gulf of Mexico, moving northeastward and then deepening rapidly off the Mid Atlantic coast
  • a blocking cold high pressure area to the north
  • another deep low pressure area to the northeast helping to anchor the high in place
These things are all very well documented and in more more detail in Kocin and Uccellini's now-classic books. One thing that really struck me in comparing these, however, was the big difference in the intensity of the cold air to the north. The other cases all had extremely cold surface temperatures in northern New England and southeastern Canada, frequently in the -20°F to -40°F range. That was not true in this case. As Dr. Masters explained, once all the other elements are in place, it doesn't need to be ultra cold in order to snow, just cold enough.

Take a look at the 12Z (7 am EST) surface map for Saturday, Feb. 6. All the right elements are there, including a honking deep 986 mb low parked near the mouth of the Chesapeake Bay, and heavy snow is pummeling the Nation's Capital. Temperatures to the north are cold, of course, but the 0° line is way out of the U.S. Single digits extend from Maine across northern New England and into Quebec. Below-zero readings are confined to central and western Ontario, too far west to be feeding into this storm.

Now consider the 12Z map closest to the heaviest snow for the 2003 event, Feb. 17. The zero line (blue dash-dot) goes from northern Nova Scotia across the northern third of Maine (-22° at Houlton), along the Canadian border and encompasses nearly all of Quebec and eastern Ontario.

In 1983, the low development is less advanced at 12Z on Feb. 11, but the freezer is working overtime to the north. The zero line (black dash-dot) takes in essentially all of New Brunswick, Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, about half of New York, Quebec, and eastern Ontario. Peak cold, as plotted, is -26° to -27°.

For the President's Day storm of 1979, the Feb. 19 map shows all the usual suspects, although the orientation of the high is somewhat different. Temperature-wise, however, the zero line cuts across a large chunk of New England (-18° at Houlton), northeastern New York, all of Quebec, and most of Michigan. Readings in the -20° range are widespread.

The Feb. 7, 1967 picture shows a little less extent for the 0° intrusion into New England, but Earlton, Ontario checks in with -33°, and Armstrong sports a mercury-freezing -39° and an unmeasurable dewpoint.

Feb. 16, 1958? Armstrong is back with its frozen instrument, and Pagwa plays "Can you top this?" with -40°.

On Feb. 7, 1936, the U.S. has embarrassingly not yet embraced the polar front theory of analysis, but the icebox is stoked with -20° to -40° temperatures.

The conclusion I would draw from all of this is that the 2010 storm was distinct from other similar events in the past by having moisture be the dominant element over temperature in producing the extreme snow amounts.

Images (click to enlarge): Surface weather maps at 12Z (7 am EST) from National Weather Service for major Washington, DC February snowstorms (top to bottom):
  • Feb. 6, 2010
  • Feb. 17, 2003
  • Feb. 11, 1983
  • Feb. 19, 1979
  • Feb. 7, 1967
  • Feb. 16, 1958
  • Feb. 7, 1936

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Seasonal Snow: Rewriting Records

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6 PM Update: Added chart of all-time top individual storms. As noted earlier, the storm of Feb. 5-6, 2010 is now the 4th biggest of all time in Washington and the 2nd biggest at Washington National.

Original post:
This weekend's epic 17.8" snowstorm in Washington has rewritten the top 10 lists for individual storms, as well as February and seasonal snowfalls with only 1 week elapsed in the month. This month's 21.1" to date just edges out the 21" in 1983 to take fourth place.

In the seasonal ranks, the 45.1" reported so far displaces the 1921-22 season and its infamous Knickerbocker storm out of the number 3 slot. With more snow expected in the middle of the week, the second place record of 1995-96 is in serious jeopardy.

Images (click to enlarge): Washington, DC biggest snowstorms of all time, highest February and seasonal snow totals, CapitalClimate charts from National Weather Service data

Saturday, February 6, 2010

New All-Time Snowfall Records at Washington Dulles, Baltimore, Wilmington

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Midnight Update: This is also the 4th highest 2-day storm total in Washington history and the 2nd highest at Washington National:
THE 17.8 INCH TWO-DAY STORM TOTAL SNOWFALL RECORDED TODAY AT RONALD 
REAGAN WASHINGTON NATIONAL AIRPORT IS THE SECOND HIGHEST TWO-DAY
STORM TOTAL RECORD...SECOND ONLY TO THE 18.7 INCHES FOR NATIONAL
AIRPORT FROM 18-19 FEBRUARY 1979. THIS WOULD ALSO BE THE 4TH
HIGHEST TWO-DAY STORM TOTAL ALL-TIME SNOWFALL FOR WASHINGTON RECORDS
WHICH DATE BACK TO 1871...BEHIND ONLY THE 27-28 JANUARY 1922
KNICKERBOCKER STORM WITH 26.0 INCHES...THE 12-13 FEBRUARY 1899 STORM
WHICH PRODUCED 19.0 INCHES...AND THE 18.7 INCHES WHICH FELL 18-19
FEBRUARY 1979.
The storm total snowfall at Wilmington, Delaware was the largest in history, and the seasonal total snowfall is now the 2nd highest on record:
THE 25.8 INCHES OF SNOW THAT FELL IN WILMINGTON LATE YESTERDAY AND 
TODAY WAS THE GREATEST SNOWFALL IN RECORDED HISTORY.

THE FIVE GREATEST SNOWFALLS AT WILMINGTON:

RANK SNOWFALL DATE
(INCHES)

1 25.8 FEBRUARY 5/6 2010
2 22.2 JANUARY 8/9 1996
3 22.0 FEBRUARY 16/17/18 2003
4 21.7 MARCH 6/7 1912
5 20.0 JANUARY 16/17/18 1907

...SECOND SNOWIEST YEAR (JULY THROUGH JUNE) THUS FAR IN
WILMINGTON...

WITH THE 25.8 INCHES OF NEW SNOW IN WILMINGTON, THE SEASON TOTAL
JUMPED TO 53.9 INCHES. THIS TOTAL NOW RANKS SECOND AND IS ONLY
BEHIND THE 55.9 INCHES THAT FELL IN 1995-1996.

THE TEN SNOWIEST YEARS (JULY THROUGH JUNE) AT WILMINGTON:

RANK SNOWFALL YEARS
(INCHES)

1 55.9 1995-1996
2 53.9 2009-2010
3 49.5 1957-1958
4 46.0 2002-2003
5 45.6 1977-1978
6 44.7 1933-1934
7 44.7 1906-1907
8 44.2 1978-1979
9 44.1 1960-1961
10 43.5 1966-1967
This was the 2nd highest storm total in Philadelphia history, and the season's total at Philadelphia is now the 2nd highest in history:
THE 28.5 INCHES WHICH FELL AT PHILADELPHIA LATE YESTERDAY AND TODAY 
WAS THE SECOND GREATEST SNOWFALL IN RECORDED HISTORY.

THE FIVE GREATEST SNOWFALLS AT PHILADELPHIA:

RANK SNOWFALL DATE
(INCHES)

1 30.7 JANUARY 7/8 1996
2 28.5 FEBRUARY 5/6 2010
3 23.2 DECEMBER 19/20 2009
4 21.3 FEBRUARY 11/12 1983
5 21.0 DECEMBER 25/26 1909

THIS IS ALSO THE FIRST TIME IN RECORDED HISTORY THAT PHILADELPHIA
HAS EXPERIENCED TWO SNOWFALLS IN EXCESS OF 20 INCHES IN THE SAME
WINTER SEASON.

...SECOND SNOWIEST YEAR (JULY THROUGH JUNE) THUS FAR IN
PHILADELPHIA...

WITH THE 28.5 INCHES OF NEW SNOW IN PHILADELPHIA, THE SEASON TOTAL
JUMPED TO 56.3 INCHES. THIS TOTAL NOW RANKS SECOND AND IS ONLY
BEHIND THE 65.5 INCHES THAT FELL IN 1995-1996.

THE TEN SNOWIEST YEARS (JULY THROUGH JUNE) AT PHILADELPHIA:

RANK SNOWFALL YEARS
(INCHES)

1 65.5 1995-1996
2 56.3 2009-2010
3 55.4 1898-1899
4 54.9 1977-1978
5 49.1 1960-1961
6 46.3 2002-2003
7 44.3 1966-1967
8 43.9 1917-1918
9 43.8 1904-1905
10 41.8 1957-1958
Original post: The National Weather Service announced this evening that new all-time snowstorm records have been set at Washington Dulles and Baltimore BWI:
AT 5:10 PM EST THIS AFTERNOON...32.4 INCHES OF TWO-DAY STORM TOTAL   
SNOWFALL WAS RECORDED AT THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WEATHER
FORECAST OFFICE IN STERLING VA. THIS OBSERVATION RECORDED AT THE
STERLING WEATHER FORECAST OFFICE IS DEEMED CLIMATOLOGICALLY
REPRESENTATIVE OF DULLES INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT DUE TO ITS PROXIMITY
TO THE AIRPORT.

PRELIMINARY INDICATIONS ARE THAT THIS 32.4 INCH TWO-DAY STORM TOTAL
SNOWFALL BREAKS THE PREVIOUS TWO-DAY STORM RECORD OF 23.2" ON 7-8
JANUARY 1996...AND THE PREVIOUS THREE-DAY STORM RECORD OF 24.6" ON
6-8 JANUARY 1996.

AT 4:54 PM EST THIS AFTERNOON...A 24.8 INCH TWO-DAY STORM TOTAL
SNOWFALL WAS ESTIMATED AT BALTIMORE/WASHINGTON INTERNATIONAL
THURGOOD MARSHALL AIRPORT.

PRELIMINARY INDICATIONS ARE THAT THIS 24.8 INCH TWO-DAY STORM TOTAL
SNOWFALL EXCEEDS THE PREVIOUS TWO-DAY STORM TOTAL SNOWFALL RECORD OF
24.4 INCHES FROM 16-17 FEBRUARY 2003.

Blog Posting Delayed by Weather
Snow Totals Updated

Blog posting and updating have been interrupted by an extended power outage and continuing Comcast cable outage. Thank you for your patience.

1 PM Update: Current snow depth on the ground:
Washington National 16"
Dulles 20"
Baltimore/BWI 24"
Original post: Here are some snowfall totals reported by the National Weather Service as of 10:42 am for the Washington/Baltimore area. At noon, Washington National was reporting heavy snow and an increase of 1" to 15". Dulles and BWI both reported moderate snow; BWI increased 1" to a current depth of 22" on the ground.
********************STORM TOTAL SNOWFALL********************  

LOCATION STORM TOTAL TIME/DATE COMMENTS
SNOWFALL OF
/INCHES/ MEASUREMENT

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

..DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

1 NNE WASHINGTON 20.0 959 AM 2/06
AMERICAN UNIVERSITY 19.5 650 AM 2/06 SPOTTER

MARYLAND

..ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY

1 NNE CROFTON 26.8 730 AM 2/06 LIQ EQUIV 2.17 COCORAHS
2 NW RIVA 25.5 830 AM 2/06
1 W GLEN BURNIE 24.5 710 AM 2/06
BALT-WASH INTL ARPT 23.9 1027 AM 2/06
MILLERSVILLE 23.5 900 AM 2/06
1 S CROFTON 21.0 800 AM 2/06
1 NE GREEN HAVEN 20.0 553 AM 2/06
GREEN HAVEN 19.2 930 AM 2/06
1 NW BELVEDERE HEIGH 18.5 925 AM 2/06
BELVEDERE HEIGHTS 18.0 1011 AM 2/06
3 SSW CROWNSVILLE 18.0 830 AM 2/06
1 NNW PASADENA 18.0 300 AM 2/06
EASTPORT 17.8 830 AM 2/06
1 NW ANNAPOLIS 17.6 900 AM 2/06
1 NNE OWINGS 15.0 700 AM 2/06
1 E CHURCHTON 12.5 845 AM 2/06

..BALTIMORE COUNTY

1 NW RANDALLSTOWN 25.0 810 AM 2/06
1 W HAMPTON 25.0 900 AM 2/06
1 E OELLA 25.0 800 AM 2/06
ESSEX 24.5 930 AM 2/06
2 NE CATONSVILLE 24.0 800 AM 2/06 SPOTTER
2 SSE HAMPSTEAD 22.5 900 AM 2/06
1 NW PERRY HALL 20.0 744 AM 2/06
1 ESE TIMONIUM 19.0 910 AM 2/06
1 ESE GLYNDON 19.0 745 AM 2/06 SPOTTER
2 NW LONG GREEN 18.0 900 AM 2/06
PARKVILLE 17.0 549 AM 2/06
1 ENE PARKVILLE 16.0 630 AM 2/06 SPOTTER
1 SE COCKEYSVILLE 14.2 420 AM 2/06
1 NNW PARKVILLE 13.2 310 AM 2/06 SPOTTER

..BALTIMORE CITY

PIMLICO 24.5 930 AM 2/06
1 S GWYNN OAK 24.0 945 AM 2/06
2 ESE ARLINGTON 23.0 900 AM 2/06
BALTIMORE 20.0 434 AM 2/06 THUNDER
1 W PARK HEIGHTS 19.5 930 AM 2/06

..FREDERICK COUNTY

2 NE JEFFERSON 26.5 850 AM 2/06
JEFFERSON 23.5 700 AM 2/06
POINT OF ROCKS 22.1 930 AM 2/06
EMMITSBURG 22.0 800 AM 2/06 SPOTTER
4 SSW FREDERICK 22.0 700 AM 2/06
3 ESE CAVETOWN 21.0 622 AM 2/06
1 WNW NEW MARKET 20.5 725 AM 2/06
NEW MARKET 20.0 730 AM 2/06

..HOWARD COUNTY

2 W ELKRIDGE 30.3 600 AM 2/06 SWE 2.73- 3-4 HR RATE
2 N COLUMBIA 27.9 900 AM 2/06
1 ESE ELLICOTT CITY 26.0 800 AM 2/06
1 WSW SAVAGE 25.0 700 AM 2/06 COCORAHS
1 SSE SIMPSONVILLE 24.5 655 AM 2/06 SPOTTER LIQ EQUIV 2.09
1 ENE GLENELG 21.0 418 AM 2/06 SPOTTER
2 SE GAITHER 20.0 700 AM 2/06 COCORAHS
1 N SAVAGE 20.0 630 AM 2/06 SPOTTER

..MONTGOMERY COUNTY

2 ESE GERMANTOWN 25.9 1014 AM 2/06
1 NW ROCKVILLE 24.5 717 AM 2/06
2 NE CLARKSBURG 24.5 700 AM 2/06
2 WSW DAMASCUS 23.0 825 AM 2/06
1 SE NORBECK 22.6 841 AM 2/06
1 NNE GLENMONT 22.1 735 AM 2/06
1 SE OLNEY 22.0 927 AM 2/06
1 S OLNEY 21.0 900 AM 2/06 1.97 LIQ EQUIV
POOLESVILLE 21.0 840 AM 2/06
1 E CLOVERLY 21.0 934 AM 2/06
1 N FOUR CORNERS 19.5 740 AM 2/06
GLEN ECHO 18.8 800 AM 2/06
FOUR CORNERS 17.0 340 AM 2/06 SPOTTER
1 NNW SOMERSET 16.5 730 AM 2/06 SPOTTER
2 WNW OLNEY 14.0 700 AM 2/06 SPOTTER

..PRINCE GEORGES COUNTY

1 SSW BELTSVILLE 20.0 920 AM 2/06
3 ENE GLENN DALE 20.0 700 AM 2/06 SPOTTER
BOWIE 19.0 800 AM 2/06
FRIENDLY 18.5 1016 AM 2/06
1 NNE GREENBELT 18.0 742 AM 2/06
1 N FRIENDLY 17.0 1000 AM 2/06
HYATTSVILLE 16.8 819 AM 2/06
CAMP SPRINGS 14.0 1000 AM 2/06 NCEP HPC

..ST. MARYS COUNTY

SOTTERLEY 11.5 945 AM 2/06
1 ESE HILLVILLE 9.5 600 AM 2/06 SPOTTER
1 NNE HOLLYWOOD 9.0 700 AM 2/06 SPOTTER
COMPTON 9.0 900 AM 2/06 MIXED WITH SLEET

VIRGINIA

..ARLINGTON COUNTY

1 NNE BAILEYS CROSSR 16.2 400 AM 2/06 SPOTTER
REAGAN NATIONAL AIRP 14.4 1026 AM 2/06
2 E BARCROFT 13.5 629 AM 2/06

..CITY OF ALEXANDRIA

1 SSW ALEXANDRIA 16.9 800 AM 2/06

..CITY OF MANASSAS

1 ESE MANASSAS 16.0 800 AM 2/06
1 W MANASSAS PARK 14.3 547 AM 2/06

..FAIRFAX COUNTY

2 NE CHANTILLY 24.0 800 AM 2/06
2 N RESTON 21.0 1023 AM 2/06
1 SE CENTREVILLE 20.0 900 AM 2/06
1 NNE HERNDON 20.0 945 AM 2/06
1 SE THE I66 AND I49 19.0 1018 AM 2/06
1 W CENTREVILLE 18.7 830 AM 2/06 2.10 LIQUID
RAVENSWORTH 18.0 845 AM 2/06
VIENNA 16.0 700 AM 2/06
LORTON 14.3 830 AM 2/06 USDA MET

..FAUQUIER COUNTY

MARSHALL 24.0 630 AM 2/06 NWS EMPLOYEE
WARRENTON 19.5 800 AM 2/06
OPAL 18.0 1000 AM 2/06

..LOUDOUN COUNTY

2 WSW LEESBURG 25.0 500 AM 2/06
BLUEMONT 25.0 929 AM 2/06
LEESBURG 24.0 900 AM 2/06
3 WSW ASHBURN 23.0 745 AM 2/06
ASHBURN 22.0 700 AM 2/06 THUNDER AT 635 AM
1 E STERLING PARK 22.0 715 AM 2/06 SPOTTER
1 SSW ARCOLA 21.2 900 AM 2/06
3 SSW ARCOLA 21.0 715 AM 2/06 NWS EMPLOYEE
MIDDLEBURG 20.0 728 AM 2/06
2 NNW DULLES INTERNA 20.0 645 AM 2/06 WFO STERLING CO-OP OB
DULLES INTERNATIONAL 18.9 1036 AM 2/06
1 NE ASHBURN 18.8 600 AM 2/06 NWS EMPLOYEE
3 NW DULLES INTERNAT 17.5 435 AM 2/06

..PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY

GAINESVILLE 20.5 900 AM 2/06
1 SSW WOODBRIDGE 12.5 500 AM 2/06 COCORAHS

Washington, Baltimore Set New Snowfall Records

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As noted earlier, Washington Dulles easily broke its daily snowfall record for Feb. 5. The liquid precipitation for the day of 0.99" also more than doubled the old record of 0.46" set in 1998.

The 8.7" of snow at Washington National broke the more substantial record of 7.5" set in 1892. The season's total so far of 36" puts 2009-10 within striking distance of surpassing the number 10 seasonal total of 37.7" in 1979. The month-to-date amount of 12", however, is still over 5" short of breaking into the top 10 February list.

The 7.8" at BWI breaks the old daily record of 6.4" in 1899.

Friday, February 5, 2010

Washington Super Storm Snowfall Scoreboard: Going for the Gold

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11 PM Update: Colder temperatures and higher snowfall rates have picked up the accumulations significantly since early this evening. National now has 8" on the ground, Dulles has 10" of new snow, for a total of 11" on the ground. Baltimore/BWI has 6".

Original post:
Super Storm!
Armageddon!
Apocalypse!
Wall-to-wall coverage of the checkout lines at Giant supermarket, snow shovel buyers at Strosnider's Hardware and Home Depot. Don't forget the live shot from the salt domes.
Do they have your attention yet?

The much anticipated Blizzard of 2010 is making itself felt in the Washington metro area. In what must be an unprecedented move, the normally-cautious National Weather Service at 12:34 issued a prediction that puts the all-time Washington snowfall record in jeopardy:
...RECORD SNOWFALL FORECAST IN THE BALTIMORE-WASHINGTON DC REGION...

EXTREMELY DANGEROUS WINTER WEATHER CONDITIONS DEVELOPING TONIGHT
GUSTY NORTHEAST WINDS 20 TO 30 MPH WITH VISIBILITIES FREQUENTLY
FALLING BELOW ONE-QUARTER MILE DUE TO HEAVY SNOW WILL DEVELOP
TONIGHT TO PRODUCE NEAR-BLIZZARD AND EXTREMELY HAZARDOUS WINTER WEATHER
CONDITIONS TONIGHT THROUGH SATURDAY MORNING. TRAVEL IS HIGHLY
DISCOURAGED TONIGHT AND WILL BE VERY DANGEROUS.
LOOKING BACK AT THE BIGGEST STORM OF RECORD FOR WASHINGTON DC... THE
JANUARY 1922 KNICKERBOCKER STORM...28.0 INCHES OF SNOW WAS
PRODUCED FROM 3.02 INCHES OF LIQUID WATER. CURRENT FORECASTS FOR
THIS EVENT HAVE TOTAL LIQUID FALLING FROM THIS STORM APPROACHING 3
INCHES...WHICH ACCORDINGLY WOULD CREATE A SNOWFALL THAT WILL RIVAL
THE KNICKERBOCKER STORM TOTAL. GENERALLY ACROSS THE REGION...20 TO
30 INCHES OF SNOW WILL FALL BY SATURDAY EVENING.
BALTIMORES RECORD OF 26.8 INCHES FROM THE PRESIDENTS DAY FEBRUARY 2003
STORM WILL ALSO BE THREATENED.
Snow began falling in the mid to late morning; here in Montgomery County MD it started with some very tiny flakes and a temperature of 37° at 10:40. The pace picked up into early afternoon, but even after several hours of precipitation, the temperature was only down to 34.5°. The above-freezing temperatures kept paved surfaces wet for several hours. Although residential streets are now snow-covered, conditions were not treacherous enough to prevent the UPS man from delivering on time a reinforcing supply of warm Gold Toe Socks.

It's still early into what is shaping up as a major storm, but in much of the metro area, it would have to be rated as underperforming its advertised target of 2-4" this afternoon. As of 4 pm, only Dulles was in the range with 3.4", which was a record for the date, since the old one was a puny 1" in 2001. National was at 1.1", and BWI had only a trace.

We noted here earlier that the major risk to the forecast for a record-breaking event was the liquid vs. frozen precipitation issue, and that is certainly still the case. In the past hour or so, radar indicates that the rain/snow line has advanced northward from Richmond to near Fredericksburg.

The chart shows the accumulated frozen and liquid precipitation at Washington National through 6 pm. The scales are in the ratio of 10:1 of frozen to liquid, so if the green is ahead of the blue, the water content is relatively higher (lower frozen to liquid ratio). Check back for updates as conditions warrant through the storm.

Image (click to enlarge): Washington National accumulated frozen vs. liquid precipitation, CapitalClimate chart from National Weather Service data

Thursday, February 4, 2010

All-Time Record Snowfalls for Washington and Baltimore

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The list of all-time biggest snowstorms in Washington and Baltimore from the National Weather Service, modified to include the record storm of December 2009:
THE TOP 11 SNOW STORMS FOR WASHINGTON ARE AS FOLLOWS...

1ST JANUARY 27-28 1922......28.0 INCHES
2ND FEBRUARY 11-13 1899......20.5 INCHES
3RD FEBRUARY 18-19 1979......18.7 INCHES
4TH JANUARY 6-8 1996......17.1 INCHES
5TH FEBRUARY 15-18 2003......16.7 INCHES
6TH FEBRUARY 11-12 1983......16.6 INCHES
7TH DECEMBER 18-19 2009. . . 16.4 INCHES
8TH FEBRUARY 15-16 1958......14.4 INCHES
9TH FEBRUARY 7 1936......14.4 INCHES
10TH FEBRUARY 16-18 1900......14.3 INCHES
11TH JANUARY 29-30 1966......13.8 INCHES

THE TOP 11 SNOW STORMS FOR BALTIMORE ARE AS FOLLOWS...

1ST FEBRUARY 15-18 2003......28.2 INCHES
2ND JANUARY 27-29 1922......26.5 INCHES
3RD FEBRUARY 11-12 1983......22.8 INCHES
4TH JANUARY 7-8 1996......22.5 INCHES
5TH DECEMBER 18-19 2009......22.2 INCHES
6TH MARCH 29-30 1942......22.0 INCHES
7TH FEBRUARY 11-14 1899......21.4 INCHES
8TH FEBRUARY 18-19 1979......20.0 INCHES
9TH MARCH 15-18 1892......16.0 INCHES
10TH FEBRUARY 15-16 1958......15.5 INCHES
11TH JANUARY 25 2000......14.9 INCHES