AN Arctic blast that brought “frostquakes” to parts of the United States saw the country record its lowest ever wind-chill temperature, meteorologists said yesterday.
Atop Mount Washington in the northeastern state of New Hampshire, the wind-chill factor reached minus 78 degrees Celsius overnight, the National Weather Service (NWS) said.
The service’s office in the town of Gray, Maine, said in a tweet that it set a new US record for the lowest wind-chill temperature in the United States.
CNN reported that it broke the previous record of minus 76C set in Alaska.
The previous low at Mount Washington was minus 74C, recorded there in 2004, the Weather Channel said.
At almost 1,920m, Mount Washington is the highest peak in the northeastern US and is known for having some of the world’s worst weather.
Temperatures of minus 43C and wind gusts of over 177km per hour combined for the historic low.
The NWS office in Caribou, Maine, said a wind chill of minus 51C was recorded in the small town of Frenchville, just south of the border with Canada.
The office said they had received reports of “frostquakes,” also called “cryoseisms,” in the region.
“Just like earthquakes, (they) generate tremors, thundering sensations. These are caused by sudden cracks in frozen soil or underground water when it’s very cold,” the NWS office wrote on Twitter.
Ahead of the blast, it had warned of an “epic, generational Arctic outbreak.”
The NWS said the chills would be “something northern and eastern Maine has not seen since similar outbreaks in 1982 and 1988.”
“Most stations are forecast to see their lowest wind chills in decades or, in some cases, the lowest ever recorded,” the service added.
It warned that frostbite to exposed skin can occur within five minutes in such conditions.
“The dangers of being caught unprepared without shelter from the elements and without proper winter survival gear cannot be stressed enough,” the service wrote.
Extreme weather warnings covering several million people were in effect across much of New England, Quebec and eastern Canada.
A wind chill factor of minus 41C was measured at Montreal International Airport.
The Hydro Quebec energy company said the polar blast had sparked record high electricity consumption late Friday and urged customers to turn down their heating by a degree or two.
In New York City, a “code blue” regulation was in effect, meaning no homeless shelter could turn anyone anyway.
In New York’s Central Park, the mercury dipped to minus 16C, the NWS said.
Wind-chill temperatures fell below minus 34C in Boston, where public schools were closed Friday as a precautionary measure.
Warmer air is due to move into the region late today. β AFP, February 5, 2023.
Comments