Winter Storm — Northern Oxford, Maine
2020-02-27 · Northern Oxford, Maine
Event narrative
A mid level warm front lifting northward brought snow showers to the area for much of the day on the 26th. A break in precipitation occurred overnight followed by a large area of heavy precipitation moving in before dawn on the 27th. Heavy, wet snow came down for most of the first half of the day before tapering off to a drier and lighter snowfall in the afternoon. Steady snow came to an end in the late afternoon but upslope snow showers continued into the overnight. Total snowfall ranged from 6 to 8 inches.
Wider weather episode
On the morning of the 26th a weak low pressure formed over the Piedmont of North Carolina and tracked northeastward along the Mid Atlantic coast. Low pressure deepened more rapidly as it moved through New England just inland from the coast. Through much of the day on the 26th there was only showery precipitation near the warm front as it moved northward. A larger and heavier area of precipitation moved into the region just ahead of the main surface low. Widespread heavy rainfall resulted south of the mountains, but in the higher terrain and to the north a heavy, wet snow fell. Steady precipitation was quick to come to an end on the afternoon of the 27th, but upslope snow showers continued into the overnight as much colder air poured into the Northeast.
Source: NOAA Storm Events Database, event_id 871175. Narrative written by the NWS forecast office that issued the report.