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The 2011 Groundhog Day blizzard [3] [4] [5] was a powerful and historic winter storm that affected large swaths of the United States and Canada from January 31 to February 2, 2011, especially on Groundhog Day.
Based on the astronomical definition, winter begins at the winter solstice, which in 2010 occurred late on December 21 (early on December 22 in EST), and ends at the March equinox, which in 2011 occurred on March 20. [2] Based on the meteorological definition, the first day of winter is December 1 and the last day February 28. [3]
The deadliest weather event of the year was the East African drought, with the resulting food shortages and famine killing more than 50,000 people, many of them children. [4] From March to August, a heat wave and drought persisted across much of the central United States, causing US$12 billion in damage and 95 deaths.
Three weather systems across North America and the Atlantic Ocean on February 3. Mid-January saw the Pacific Northwest significantly affected by winter weather, with a storm bringing some of the coldest air to affect the region since winter began. Accompanying the cold air were snow showers across western parts of Washington and Oregon; heavy ...
Cold January: This February forecast looks quite a bit different than January, as the map below of January temperature anomalies (through the 27th) shows. According to AG2's Todd Crawford, it was ...
February 2011 events in the United Kingdom (1 C, 3 P) February 2011 events in the United States (2 C, 15 P) This page was last edited on 27 January 2025, at 13:18 ...
Warmer weather. Temperatures may approach record territory across more than a dozen states this week as mild Pacific air takes charge during the early days of February, AccuWeather experts say ...
While records will be in jeopardy through midweek across the South, the number of potential records at risk will peak Thursday when temperatures can soar between 15-25 degrees above the historical ...