extrem KaltWinter Montreal 1883/84, 1893; 1903, 1913 ("white Hurricane Nov), 1923 ("Spring Snowstorm" May), 1933 (Oimjakon) + aktuellhttp://http://www.wetterzentrale.de/klima/tmontrea.html
1875: J+F
1874: J, 1875 F
1893: J + D
1903 -05: im Dez. 1903, im Jan. und Feb. und Dez. ging es weiter
1912: J
1917/18 D/J, nach 10-Jahre-Takt da dann 5 Jahre später
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die Abbildung fand ich hier:
vom 27.02.2014
die Jan. Cold wave:
hier die Ereignisse in 1903, 1913, 1923
und die von 1933 ff mit der Staubwalze in Amerika, siehe Foto hier:
Winter of 1903-04
This winter ranks as the coldest of all time across much of lower Michigan. In Detroit, the average temperature from December through February was 18.7 degrees. Both Saginaw and Flint also saw the coldest winters on record. In terms of snowfall, this winter was no slouch either, with Detroit recording 57.0 inches (14th highest of all time) and Saginaw recording 74.9 inches (4th highest of all time)
White Hurricane – November 1913
This powerful November storm is considered to be the worst to strike the Great Lakes region in recorded history. While there were other notable winter storms comparable to this one, this is considered the worst because the lakes were still ice-free and shipping was still going strong, causing much more damage and loss of life on the lakes, especially Lake Huron. Sustained winds across eastern lower Michigan, from Detroit up through the Thumb, reached as high as 60 mph, with recorded gusts over 70 mph. While Detroit only received 4.3 inches of snow, many areas along the Lake Huron shoreline received very heavy snow, with snow drifts of several feet reported. But the most memorable thing about this storm is the extreme loss of life that occurred at sea. At least 235 sailors lost their lives on Lake Huron, due to the sinking of dozens of ships, including 8 large freighters.
Spring Snowstorm – May 9, 1923
An extremely unusual weather event occurred across lower Michigan during the afternoon of May 8, 1923. A very powerful cold front swept across the state, dropping temperatures from noon readings in the 60's to the lower 30's by six o'clock. Remarkably, a rain/snow mix was observed, with reports of up to an inch of accumulation reported. However, the following day saw a storm developing in Ohio, stuck between the cold air across Michigan and the warm air across the Ohio Valley. The result was very heavy snow across lower Michigan, much of which fell during the afternoon hours.
der Nov. Hurricane:
1933: Rekord in Oimjakon:
der neue Rekord:
1883/84: 1883-1884 had a very cold January
1893: Januar -10.1 ° C
1903: Dez. 1902 -5.6 ° C, Jan -6.9 und Feb. -7.2 ° C
1912: Jan. -11.1, 1913, der "weiße Hurrikan" im Nov.
1923: der Mai-Schneesturm
1933: Oimajakon-Kälterekord von -68 ° C
"Posted 30 December 2013 - 02:58 PM , Location:Columbus, Ohio, Ottawa Blizzard, on 30 Dec 2013 - 05:28 AM, said:
This is totally unscientific, but it's interesting how winters with a three and four in them often end up being cold: 1903-04, 1933/34, 1983/84, 1993/94, 2003/04 and now perhaps 2013/14?"
Quelle:
Ich habe diese zwar nicht gant wissenschaftliche Feststellung nun erweitert auf: 1883/84, 1893, 1903, 1912+13, 1923, 1933, .... 1977, 1982, 1993, 2003, 2013/14
1977 Chicago im Jan. -12.2 ° C
1982 Ch. im Jan. -11.0 ° C , 5 Jahre später, dann Kälte wieder im 10-Jahre-Takt