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Blizzard — Northern New London, Connecticut

2018-01-04 · Northern New London, Connecticut

Event narrative

The nearby Groton-New London Airport ASOS (Groton, CT) observations showed blizzard conditions, with visibility less than one quarter mile in heavy snow and frequent wind gusts over 35 mph during the morning and early afternoon on January 4th.

Wider weather episode

The development of the blizzard/winter storm began along the southeast coast on Wednesday January 3, 2018. An amplifying upper level trough spawned the development of low pressure off the coast of Florida. The low pressure rapidly intensified on Wednesday night through Thursday January 4, 2018 as it moved north-northeast along the coast. The low passed just east of the 40N 70W benchmark Thursday afternoon. The central pressure when the storm developed was around 1004 millibars at 1 pm Wednesday. 24 hours later, the central pressure fell to around 950 mb, approximately a 54 millibar drop. The rapid intensification of the storm led to heavy snow, strong winds, and blizzard conditions across Fairfield and New London Counties. Near-blizzard conditions occurred in New Haven and Middlesex counties due to the heaviest snow bands setting up to the east and west. Thundersnow was also observed across southeast Connecticut.

System-wide delays and cancellations occurred on the Metro North Railroad. Thousands of homes and businesses also lost power.

There were numerous other accidents across southern Connecticut.


Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 736979. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.