How much snow fell in the Blizzard of 1996?

In Blacksburg, West Virginia, where 34 inches of snow fell, mobile home roofs collapsed, and an 80-car train derailed. Some National Weather Service employees worked 32 consecutive hours as roads mainly were impassable, and many of their cars were buried in the parking lot for days.

How much snow fell in the Blizzard of 1993?

1993 Storm of the Century

Category 5 “Extreme” (RSI/NOAA: 24.63)
Satellite image by NASA of the storm on March 13, 1993, at 10:01 UTC.
Maximum snowfall or ice accretion Snow – 56 in (140 cm) at Mt. Le Conte, Tennessee
Fatalities 318 fatalities
Damage > $2 billion (1993 USD) (Second-costliest winter storm on record)

What was the worst snowstorm on Long Island?

Since then, the biggest one-day snowfall officially recorded at Long Island is 23.4 inches (59.4 centimetres) on January 23, 2016. Since 1964 the snowfall extremes were measured at Long Island MacArthur Airport in Ronkonkoma.

What is Winter Storm Nemo?

Winter Storm Nemo, dubbed by many as “Snowmaggedon” & “Snowpocalypse” is expected to pound the Boston area with as much as two feet of snow on Friday. Winter Storm Nemo: Top 10 Facts You Need to Know | Heavy.com

How many inches of snow did Nemo leave in Illinois?

^ Grom, Korrina (February 8, 2013). “UPDATE: Winter Storm Nemo Leaves up to 9.5 Inches of Snow Across Northern Illinois”. Palatine Patch.

How much snow did New Haven get from Nemo?

Hartford received 36” during the Blizzard of 1888 (although the ‘official’ total was much lower since the observation site at that time was on a hill and the snow was mostly blown clear from the location). New Haven picked up 44.7” in 1888 versus 34” from Nemo. An interesting aside, is the intensity of the snowfall rates reached during Nemo’s peak.

What was the difference between Nemo and the 1888 storm?

Also, the 1888 storm actually made a small loop south of Long Island, unlike Nemo. This resulted in a mostly rain event for eastern Massachusetts (Boston just had 7” of slushy snow) and Maine in 1888 with the core of the heaviest snow falling from New York City north to Albany and east though western Massachusetts, Vermont, and Connecticut.