TornadoLookup
HomeNew HampshireSouthern Carroll

Winter Storm — Southern Carroll, New Hampshire

2019-12-29 to 2019-12-31 · Southern Carroll, New Hampshire

Event narrative

Precipitation moved in late on December 29th as snow at onset. A band of moderate to heavy to snow stalled overhead on the morning of the 30th. In the afternoon warm air advection allowed snow to briefly mix with sleet at times. Precipitation changed back over to snow in the early evening and light snow continued into the morning of the 31st. Snow and sleet totals ranged from 12 to 15 inches.

Wider weather episode

On December 29th a primary low pressure moved into the Upper Midwest with a warm front draped off to the east. Air rising over the warm front brought precipitation into New England late on the 29th as a mix of freezing rain, sleet, and snow with a relatively mild air mass in place. The feed of colder air strengthened through the 30th with significant amounts of mixed precipitation occurring over the southwestern part of New Hampshire. A nearly stationary band of moderate to heavy snow set up over the eastern part of the state. As the upper trough approached in the afternoon thunderstorms developed south of the warm front and moved across it into the cold air. Thunder was reported with freezing rain and sleet across southern New Hampshire before the convection weakened. It was around this time that precipitation began to change over to all snow. Light snow continued into the 31st as secondary low pressure developed south of New England.


Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 864022. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.