Dec 21, 2022
For those in the Northern Hemisphere, Wednesday, December 21, marks the Winter Solstice. It kicks off the winter season. It’s the shortest day of sunlight of the year. This year, though, scientists are predicting further signs of winter’s arrival: super cold temperatures and snow.
The National Weather Service (NWS) has forecast two big weather systems. They will likely impact much of the US through Christmas. The first is a huge “surge of Arctic air.” It's expected to dip from Canada all the way down to Texas and Florida. Temperatures from Montana to the Florida Panhandle are expected to drop 40 to 50 degrees below normal. Some places will see their lowest temperatures since 1989. That includes wind chills of -55 degrees, The Washington Post reports.
The second system is a “bomb cyclone” storm. The name comes from how the storm develops. It grows quickly. It also has a counter-clockwise spin. The NWS warned that the storm will probably bring “rapidly deteriorating conditions by late Thursday afternoon. Blizzard conditions will likely occur overnight into Friday” for cities in the Midwest. Chicago, Milwaukee, and Indianapolis will be affected by the storm.
The NWS warns that the storm's path could change a bit. But they're telling people from Oklahoma to Pennsylvania to prepare for whiteout conditions. 12-18 inches of snow could fall. High winds are likely to make travel during the busiest time of the year super hard.
NWS Chicago told people to think about changing their travel plans.
Disappearing Winter Snowpack
This article explains how climate change has caused a decrease in snowpack in the western United States.
Extreme Weather Lesson: Are Winters Getting Worse?
In this lesson, students discover how climate change could be making extreme winter weather worse.
Winter BINGO in CT
This bingo sheet supplies fun facts about Connecticut's wildlife in the winter and encourages students to go outside in their neighborhood to identify local birds, mammals, plants, and animal tracks.