NEW: More Snow Expected in Central MA This Weekend
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Friday, February 14, 2014
John Ghiorse, GoLocalWorcester Meteorlogist
This no-quit winter just keeps chugging along, grinding out storm after storm and cold air blasts with production line regularity. There won't be much down time after yesterday's mess. Another weak low pressure center now over the Mid-Mississippi Valley will head toward the Mid-Atlantic coast by tomorrow morning. It then will undergo rapid intensification and head northeastward passing southeast of Nantucket tomorrow night as it heads into the open Atlantic.
What does it mean for us? Well, for starters, more snow with perhaps a bit of rain at the start especially over the Cape and Islands but it should be a snowstorm for about all of us with heaviest amounts form Rhode Island into Eastern Massachusetts and perhaps the Cape. Central and Western new England should see less snow from this storm.
It's likely to start snowing sometime tomorrow afternoon, become heaviest at night and wind down by early Sunday. Earliest estimates are for 6 inches or more from Rhode Island eastward through Massachusetts and for less than 6 inches from Rhode Island westward but that could change once I see just where the storm center forms early tomorrow.
Related Slideshow: Top 10 Blizzards in MA History
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10. Blizzard of 2006
Max Accumulation: Approximately 22"
February 11-13, 2006
Arriving on the evening of Feb. 13, this Nor’easter resulted in heavy snow, coastal flooding and a storm surge in Massachusetts. Wilbraham was the hardest hit area receiving more than 22 inches of snow.
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9. Blizzard of 2010
Max Accumulation: Approximately 24"
December 22-29, 2010
This historic blizzard brought as much as two feet of snow to parts of Massachusetts and caused Boston to declare a State of Emergency.
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8. Winter Storm Nemo
Max Accumulation: Approximately 25"
February 7-18, 2013
Total snowfall in Boston reached nearly 25 inches, making it the fifth-highest total ever recorded in the city.
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7. 1969 Nor’easter
Max Accumulation: Approximately 26"
February 8-10, 1969
This storm blanketed many parts of Massachusetts with upwards of 20 inches of snow, including 26.3 in Boston.
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6. Blizzard of 2003
Max Accumulation: Approximately 27.5"
February 14-19, 2013
Know as the President’s Day Storm II, this blizzard brought a record-setting 27.5 inches of snow to Boston.
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5. Blizzard of 1996
Max Accumulation: Approximately 30"
Jan. 6-10, 1996
One of two blizzards to receive an “extreme” rating on the Northeast Snowfall Impact Scale, this storm blanketing parts of Western Massachusetts with upwards of 30 inches of snow.
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4. Blizzard of 1978
Max Accumulation: Approximately 32"
February 5-7, 1978
This historic nor’easter brought a then-record 27.1 inches of snowfall to Boston and over 32 inches to Rockport. Additionally, the storm killed 73 Bay State residents.
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3. April Fool's Day Blizzard
Max Accumulation: Approximately 33"
March 30 to April 1, 1997
This blizzard was no joke, dropping a record-breaking 33 inches on Worcester.
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2. Blizzard of 2005
Max Accumulation: Approximately 40"
January 20-23, 2005
This three-day storm delivered more than 40 inches of snow in Mashpee, Massachusetts, one of the hardest hit areas. Some portions of Massachusetts reported 6 foot snow drifts.
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1. Great Blizzard of 1888
Max Accumulation: Approximately 50"
March 11-14, 1888
One of the most severe recorded blizzards in the history of the United States, this superstorm dumped as much as 50 inches of snow in parts of Massachusetts.
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