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The snow event began in early January 1950 with a hailstorm in Tel Aviv and light snow in the mountains of the Upper Galilee and Jerusalem. [1] On 27 January, it began to snow in the northern mountains and Jerusalem. It piled up but quickly melted. A cold front spread throughout the country, and snow began falling in the mountains of Samaria ...
5-6 February: Snow blankets most of the country. 5–6 February - Snow falls for two days throughout the country, in a rare meteorological phenomenon for the coastal plain and the Negev desert. 11 February – Britain releases Israeli assets worth £15 million that have been frozen since the end of the Mandate in 1948.
December 30 – January 6: 23.8 inches (60 cm) 936 hPa (27.6 inHg) Storm Category 2 January 19–24: 18.3 inches (46 cm) 962 hPa (28.4 inHg) Blizzard Category 1 January 27–31: 10 inches (25 cm) 999 hPa (29.5 inHg) Blizzard Category 1 February 11–24: 27.5 inches (70 cm) 968 hPa (28.6 inHg) Blizzard Category 4
The snowiest January dates back to 1977 when 21 inches fell during a brutally cold month and the warmest? A June-like 73 degrees over 100 years ago
Take a look at January weather records for freezing temperatures, snow and rain in Cincinnati.
The attack kills at least 18 people: eight men, five women and five children. Anonymous U.S. government sources claim he was invited to a feast in the village, but did not attend. Augustine Volcano in Alaska has erupted five times in the past three days, the first eruptions in nearly two decades. The island is uninhabited. (National Geographic)
Snow totals were tame around Milwaukee compared to many other parts of the state. The Milwaukee area saw between 1.5 and 2.5 inches of snow, according to the most recent data from the National ...
Beginning December 11, a large anticyclone moved northward in the jet stream over Europe; its east edge drew a strong current of cold air south from the Arctic. This polar outbreak overspread Turkey and the Eastern Mediterranean region, pushing below moist air associated with a passing front, causing heavy snow and sleet over higher ground in Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Israel.