Blizzard Buries New England, Breaks Snowfall Records  					
-  							Published: February 9th, 2013 							, Last Updated: February 9th, 2013
 
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								By 
Andrew Freedman 							
 							Follow @afreedma						
 					 					  					 					 						 							 						 							 						 							 										  						  						  						  						  						 							 	Millions of New Englanders woke up to a staggering amount of snow as  well as coastal flooding problems on Saturday after one of the worst  winter storms on record slammed the region with whiteout conditions and  hurricane-force winds, dumping more than 3 feet of snow in some places.
  	 								 																			
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
	
	
 																		Boston's North End neighborhood amid the snow drifts on Saturday morning.
	Credit: Twitter via Matt Meister. 								 							
  	The storm shut down travel across the region, knocked out power to  nearly 700,000 customers, stranded motorists in their vehicles on Long  Island, and exceeded benchmarks set during the infamous Blizzard of  1978, which occurred 35 years ago this week.
  	The storm brought accumulations of at least 30 inches to five states:  Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and New York.
  	This was by far the largest single snowstorm on record in Portland,  Maine, the second-biggest snowstorm on record in Concord, N.H., the  fifth-largest snowstorm on record in Boston with 24.9 inches, and the  third-largest snowstorm in Worcester, Mass. A band of extraordinarily  heavy snow, accompanied by lightning and thunder, dumped several inches  of snow per hour across Long Island and Connecticut on Friday night,  causing 
Connecticut to be ground zero for some of the heaviest snow totals.
  	Numerous locations around Connecticut, which was also hit extremely hard by a 
freak October blizzard  in 2011, reported more than 30 inches of snow. As of 4 p.m. on  Saturday, the snowfall jackpot belonged to Hamden, Conn., with an  astounding 40 inches. New Haven also received 34.3 inches. The National  Weather Service 
posted an interactive graphic containing snow and wind reports for all of New England. 
  	New York City narrowly escaped blizzard conditions, but still received  between 8-to-12 inches of snow, with much higher amounts to the north  and east of the city.
  	 								 																			
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
	
	
 																		The snowy scene in Swampscott, Mass., on Saturday morning.
	Credit: Robert Freedman. 								 							
  	This storm was noteworthy for delivering extraordinary snowfall amounts  in an exceedingly short time, accompanied by near-zero visibility and  winds greater than hurricane force (74 mph). The 
Blizzard of 1978,  for example, took three days to deposit a similar amount of snow,  whereas this storm dumped up to 10 inches in three hours in southern  Connecticut on Friday night.
  	As the storm intensified rapidly, in a process known to meteorologists  as "bombogenesis," it produced strong wind gusts — 82 mph in Westport,  Conn., 83 mph in Cuttyhunk, Mass., and 76 mph at Boston's Logan Airport.  The wind gust at Logan was one of the strongest recorded at that  location in 30 years. The storm had a broad footprint, as winds exceeded  50 mph all the way south into Virginia.
  	The storm caused 
major coastal flooding  along east- and north-facing shoreline locations, particularly  Winthrop, and Scituate, Mass., towns that were also hit hard 35 years  ago. According to local news reports, a seawall was partially breached  in Scituate. Wave heights of at least 31 feet were recorded by a buoy  off the coast of Cape Ann, Mass., and large waves were battering the  coast on Cape Cod, as well as the islands of Nantucket and Martha's  Vineyard.
  	The storm struck just days after a 
report warned of the region’s growing vulnerability to such storm-surge events. The report, by the 
nonprofit Boston Harbor Alliance,  found that coastal flooding of 5 feet above the current average high  tide — similar to the surge seen during Hurricane Sandy and translating  to the city’s 100-year flood level — would flood 6.6 percent of the city  of Boston.
  	 								 									  										
 																			
	
 									  										 																		Infrared satellite image of the blizzard as it neared maximum intensity on Friday night. 
	
Click to enlarge the image. Credit: ********/Stu Ostro. 								 							
  	
Sea levels are rising worldwide  due to warming ocean temperatures, melting polar ice caps, and sinking  land masses, along with other factors. Higher sea levels provide a  higher launching pad for storm surges from hurricanes and nor’easters,  making it possible for relatively weak storms to cause major damage.
  	In Boston, the top five highest storm tides, which is the combination of the tide level and storm surge, 
all occurred during nor’easters.
  	According to NOAA's 
Climate Extremes Index,  during the cold season in the Northeast in recent years, big 24-hour  precipitation events have accounted for an increasing proportion of the  seasonal precipitation total. This  indicates that extreme precipitation events are playing a larger role  in the cold season, and these events, including this blizzard, can have  major societal impacts. 
  	Studies have linked this trend in extreme precipitation events to  manmade global warming, since warming increases atmospheric moisture.  However, much of the increase in one-day extreme precipitation events  during the cold season in the Northeast has taken place in the fall and  early spring, rather than February.