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{{distinguish|Cold front}}
{{For|the music genre|Cold wave (music)}}
{{redirect|Cold snap}}
{{short description|Weather phenomenon}}
{{short description|Weather phenomenon}}
{{About||the music genre|Cold wave (music)|the leading edge of a cooler mass of air|Cold front}}
{{globalize|article|the United States|date=January 2011}}
{{redirect|Cold snap}}
{{globalize|article|the United States|date=April 2022}}
{{Weather}}
{{Weather}}
A '''cold wave''' (known in some regions as a '''cold snap''', '''cold spell''' or '''Arctic Snap''') is a weather phenomenon that is distinguished by a cooling of the air. Specifically, as used by the U.S. [[National Weather Service]], a cold wave is a rapid fall in temperature within a 24-hour period requiring substantially increased protection to agriculture, industry, commerce, and social activities. The precise criteria for a cold wave are the rate at which the temperature falls, and the minimum to which it falls. This minimum temperature is dependent on the geographical region and time of year.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://amsglossary.allenpress.com/glossary/search?id=cold-wave1|title=Cold Wave|publisher=[[American Meteorological Society|AMS]]: Glossary of Meteorology|access-date=2008-09-25|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110514110247/http://amsglossary.allenpress.com/glossary/search?id=cold-wave1|archive-date=2011-05-14}}</ref>


In the United States, a ''cold spell'' is defined as the national average high temperature dropping below {{convert|20|F}}.<ref>{{Cite news|first=Seth |last=Borenstein |title=Winters aren't colder; we're just softer |url=http://www.bnd.com/2014/01/09/2996864/scientists-americans-are-becoming.html |newspaper=Florida Today |location=Melbourne, Florida |pages=8A |date=January 10, 2014 |access-date=January 12, 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140113033838/http://www.bnd.com/2014/01/09/2996864/scientists-americans-are-becoming.html |archive-date=January 13, 2014 }}</ref><!---soft and hard copy sources differ. They are, however, identical articles---> A cold wave of sufficient magnitude and duration may be classified as a '''cold air outbreak''' ('''CAO''').<ref name="CAO">{{cite journal |last = Smith |first = Erik T. |author2 = S. C. Sheridan |title = The characteristics of extreme cold events and cold air outbreaks in the eastern United States |journal = Int. J. Climatol. |volume = 38|pages = e807–e820|date = 2018 |doi = 10.1002/joc.5408 |bibcode = 2018IJCli..38E.807S|s2cid = 133920737 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Smith |first1=Erik T. |last2=Sheridan |first2=Scott C. |title=Where do Cold Air Outbreaks occur and how have they changed over time? |journal=Geophysical Research Letters |date=2020 |volume=47 |issue=13 |pages=e86983 |doi=10.1029/2020GL086983 |bibcode=2020GeoRL..4786983S |s2cid=219424375 }}</ref>
A '''cold wave''' (known in some regions as a '''cold snap''' or '''cold spell''') is a weather phenomenon that is distinguished by a cooling of the air. Specifically, as used by the U.S. [[National Weather Service]], a cold wave is a rapid fall in temperature within a 24-hour period requiring substantially increased protection to agriculture, industry, commerce, and social activities. The precise criteria for a cold wave are the rate at which the temperature falls, and the minimum to which it falls. This minimum temperature is dependent on the geographical region and time of year.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://amsglossary.allenpress.com/glossary/search?id=cold-wave1|title=Cold Wave|publisher=[[American Meteorological Society|AMS]]: Glossary of Meteorology|access-date=2008-09-25|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110514110247/http://amsglossary.allenpress.com/glossary/search?id=cold-wave1|archive-date=2011-05-14}}</ref>

In the United States, a ''cold spell'' is defined as the national average high temperature dropping below {{convert|20|F}}.<ref>{{Cite news|first=Seth |last=Borenstein |title=Winters aren't colder; we're just softer |url=http://www.bnd.com/2014/01/09/2996864/scientists-americans-are-becoming.html |newspaper=Florida Today |location=Melbourne, Florida |pages=8A |date=January 10, 2014 |access-date=January 12, 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140113033838/http://www.bnd.com/2014/01/09/2996864/scientists-americans-are-becoming.html |archive-date=January 13, 2014 }}</ref><!---soft and hard copy sources differ. They are, however, identical articles---> A cold wave of sufficient magnitude and duration may be classified as a '''cold air outbreak''' ('''CAO''').<ref name="CAO">{{cite journal |last = Smith |first = Erik T. |author2 = S. C. Sheridan |title = The characteristics of extreme cold events and cold air outbreaks in the eastern United States |journal = Int. J. Climatol. |volume = 38|pages = e807–e820|date = 2018 |doi = 10.1002/joc.5408 |bibcode = 2018IJCli..38E.807S}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Smith |first1=Erik T. |last2=Sheridan |first2=Scott C. |title=Where do Cold Air Outbreaks occur and how have they changed over time? |journal=Geophysical Research Letters |date=2020 |volume=47 |issue=13 |pages=e86983 |doi=10.1029/2020GL086983 |bibcode=2020GeoRL..4786983S }}</ref>


==Effects==
==Effects==
A cold wave can cause death and injury to livestock and wildlife. Exposure to cold mandates greater [[food energy|caloric intake]] for all animals, including humans, and if a cold wave is accompanied by heavy and persistent snow, grazing animals may be unable to reach needed food and die of [[hypothermia]] or starvation. They often necessitate the purchase of foodstuffs to feed livestock at considerable cost to farmers.
A cold wave can cause death and injury to livestock and wildlife. Exposure to cold mandates greater [[food energy|caloric intake]] for all animals, including humans, and if a cold wave is accompanied by heavy and persistent snow, grazing animals may be unable to reach needed food and die of [[hypothermia]] or starvation. They often necessitate the purchase of foodstuffs to feed livestock at considerable cost to farmers.


Cold spells are associated with increased mortality rates in populations around the world.<ref name="JaakkolaGuo2015">{{cite journal|last1=Jaakkola|first1=Jouni J.K.|last2=Guo|first2=Yuming|last3=Ryti|first3=Niilo R.I.|title=Global Association of Cold Spells and Adverse Health Effects: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis|journal=Environmental Health Perspectives|volume=124|issue=1|pages=12–22|year=2015|issn=0091-6765|doi=10.1289/ehp.1408104|pmid=25978526|pmc=4710591}}</ref> Both cold waves and heat waves cause deaths, though different groups of people may be susceptible to different weather events.<ref name="JoacimBertil2014">{{cite journal|last1=Joacim|first1=Rocklöv|last2=Bertil|first2=Forsberg|last3=Kristie|first3=Ebi|last4=Tom|first4=Bellander|title=Susceptibility to mortality related to temperature and heat and cold wave duration in the population of Stockholm County, Sweden|journal=Global Health Action|volume=7|pages=22737|year=2014|issn=1654-9880|doi=10.3402/gha.v7.22737|pmid=24647126|pmc=3955771}}</ref> More deaths occur during a cold wave than in a hot wave,<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Gasparrini|first1=Antonio|last2=Guo|first2=Yuming|last3=Hashizume|first3=Masahiro|last4=Lavigne|first4=Eric|last5=Zanobetti|first5=Antonella|last6=Schwartz|first6=Joel|last7=Tobias|first7=Aurelio|last8=Tong|first8=Shilu|last9=Rocklöv|first9=Joacim|last10=Forsberg|first10=Bertil|last11=Leone|first11=Michela|date=July 2015|title=Mortality risk attributable to high and low ambient temperature: a multicountry observational study|journal=The Lancet|volume=386|issue=9991|pages=369–375|doi=10.1016/s0140-6736(14)62114-0|pmid=26003380|pmc=4521077|issn=0140-6736|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Lomborg, Bjørn, 1965-|title=False alarm : how climate change panic costs us trillions, hurts the poor, and fails to fix the planet|publisher=Basic Books|year=2020|isbn=978-1-5416-4746-6|edition=First|location=New York|chapter=3|oclc=1130688978}}</ref> though the mortality rate is higher in undeveloped regions of the world. Globally, more people die during hot weather than cold weather. Extreme winter cold often causes poorly [[Thermal insulation|insulated]] water [[Pipeline transport|pipelines]] and mains to freeze. Even some poorly protected indoor [[plumbing]] ruptures as water expands within them, causing much damage to property and costly insurance claims. Demand for electrical power and [[fuel]]s rises dramatically during such times, even though the generation of electrical power may fail due to the freezing of water necessary for the generation of [[hydroelectricity]]. Some metals may become brittle at low temperatures. Motor vehicles may fail when [[antifreeze]] fails or motor oil gels, producing a failure of the transportation system. To be sure, such is more likely in places like [[Siberia]] and much of Canada that customarily get very cold weather.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}
Cold spells are associated with increased mortality rates in populations around the world.<ref name="JaakkolaGuo2015">{{cite journal|last1=Jaakkola|first1=Jouni J.K.|last2=Guo|first2=Yuming|last3=Ryti|first3=Niilo R.I.|title=Global Association of Cold Spells and Adverse Health Effects: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis|journal=Environmental Health Perspectives|volume=124|issue=1|pages=12–22|year=2015|issn=0091-6765|doi=10.1289/ehp.1408104|pmid=25978526|pmc=4710591}}</ref> Both cold waves and [[heat waves]] cause deaths, though different groups of people may be susceptible to different weather events.<ref name="JoacimBertil2014">{{cite journal|last1=Joacim|first1=Rocklöv|last2=Bertil|first2=Forsberg|last3=Kristie|first3=Ebi|last4=Tom|first4=Bellander|title=Susceptibility to mortality related to temperature and heat and cold wave duration in the population of Stockholm County, Sweden|journal=Global Health Action|volume=7|pages=22737|year=2014|issn=1654-9880|doi=10.3402/gha.v7.22737|pmid=24647126|pmc=3955771}}</ref> More temperature-attributable deaths occur during a cold wave than in a heat wave,<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Gasparrini|first1=Antonio|last2=Guo|first2=Yuming|last3=Hashizume|first3=Masahiro|last4=Lavigne|first4=Eric|last5=Zanobetti|first5=Antonella|last6=Schwartz|first6=Joel|last7=Tobias|first7=Aurelio|last8=Tong|first8=Shilu|last9=Rocklöv|first9=Joacim|last10=Forsberg|first10=Bertil|last11=Leone|first11=Michela|date=July 2015|title=Mortality risk attributable to high and low ambient temperature: a multicountry observational study|journal=The Lancet|volume=386|issue=9991|pages=369–375|doi=10.1016/s0140-6736(14)62114-0|pmid=26003380|pmc=4521077|issn=0140-6736|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Lomborg|first=Bjorn|url=https://openlibrary.org/books/OL29483383M/False_Alarm|title=False Alarm: How Climate Change Panic Costs Us Trillions, Hurts the Poor, and Fails to Fix the Planet|date=2020|publisher=Basic Books|isbn=978-1-5416-4746-6|ol=29483383M}}</ref> though the mortality rate is higher in undeveloped regions of the world. Extreme winter cold often causes poorly [[Thermal insulation|insulated]] water [[Pipeline transport|pipelines]] and mains to freeze. Even some poorly protected indoor [[plumbing]] ruptures as water expands within them, causing much damage to property and costly insurance claims. Demand for electrical power and [[fuel]]s rises dramatically during such times, even though the generation of electrical power may fail due to the freezing of water necessary for the generation of [[hydroelectricity]]. Some metals may become brittle at low temperatures. Motor vehicles may fail when [[antifreeze]] fails or motor oil gels, producing a failure of the transportation system.


Fires become even more of a hazard during extreme cold. Water mains may break and water supplies may become unreliable, making [[firefighting]] more difficult. The air during a cold wave is typically denser and thus contains more oxygen, so when air that a fire draws in becomes unusually cold it is likely to cause a more intense fire{{Citation needed|date=June 2019}}. However, [[snow]] may stop spreading of fires, especially [[wildfire]]s.
Fires become even more of a hazard during extreme cold. Water mains may break and water supplies may become unreliable, making [[firefighting]] more difficult. The air during a cold wave is typically denser and thus contains more oxygen, so when air that a fire draws in becomes unusually cold it is likely to cause a more intense fire.{{Citation needed|date=June 2019}} However, [[snow]] may stop spreading of fires, especially [[wildfire]]s.


Winter cold waves that are not considered cold in some areas, but cause temperatures significantly below average for an area, are also destructive. Areas with subtropical climates may recognize unusual cold, perhaps barely freezing, temperatures, as a cold wave. In such places, plant and animal life is less tolerant of such cold as may appear rarely. The same winter temperatures that one associates with the norm for [[Colorado]], [[Ohio]], or [[Bavaria]] are catastrophic to winter crops in places like
Winter cold waves that are not considered cold in some areas, but cause temperatures significantly below average for an area, are also destructive. Areas with subtropical climates may recognize a cold wave at higher temperatures than other, colder areas of the globe. The cold wave may be recognized at barely freezing temperatures, as these are still unusually cold for the region, and plant and animal life will be less tolerant of such cold. The same winter temperatures that one associates with the norm for [[Colorado]], [[Ohio]], or [[Bavaria]] are catastrophic to crops in places like [[Florida]], [[California]], or parts of [[South America]] that grow fruit and vegetables in winter.
[[Florida]], [[California]], or parts of [[South America]] that grow fruit and vegetables in winter.


Cold waves that bring unexpected freezes and frosts during the growing season in mid-latitude zones can kill plants during the early and most vulnerable stages of growth, resulting in crop failure as plants are killed before they can be [[harvest]]ed economically. Such cold waves have caused [[famine]]s. At times as deadly to plants as [[drought]], cold waves can leave land in danger of later brush and [[forest fire]]s that consume dead biomass. One extreme was the so-called [[Year Without a Summer]] of 1816, one of several years during the 1810s in which numerous crops failed during freakish summer cold snaps after [[volcanic eruption]]s that reduced incoming sunlight.
Cold waves that bring unexpected freezes and frosts during the growing season in mid-latitude zones can kill plants during the early and most vulnerable stages of growth, resulting in crop failure as plants are killed before they can be [[harvest]]ed economically. Such cold waves have caused [[famine]]s. At times as deadly to plants as [[drought]], cold waves can leave land in danger of later brush and [[forest fire]]s that consume dead biomass. One extreme was the so-called [[Year Without a Summer]] of 1816, one of several years during the 1810s in which numerous crops failed during freakish summer cold snaps after [[volcanic eruption]]s that reduced incoming sunlight.


Recent research suggests a possible link between cold waves in North America and extratropical [[cyclogenesis]] over the East Atlantic.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Messori |first1=Gabriele |last2=Caballero |first2=Rodrigo |last3=Gaetani |first3=Marco |title=On cold spells in North America and storminess in western Europe |journal=Geophysical Research Letters |date=2016 |volume=43 |issue=12 |pages=6620–6628 |doi=10.1002/2016GL069392|bibcode=2016GeoRL..43.6620M |doi-access=free }}</ref> These may be connected by large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns. <ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Messori |first1=Gabriele |last2=Faranda |first2=Davide |date=2023-04-16 |title=On the Systematic Occurrence of Compound Cold Spells in North America and Wet or Windy Extremes in Europe |journal=Geophysical Research Letters |language=en |volume=50 |issue=7 |doi=10.1029/2022GL101008 |issn=0094-8276|doi-access=free |bibcode=2023GeoRL..5001008M }}</ref> Examples include [[Rossby wave]] propagation from the North Pacific or an upper-level [[anticyclone]] west of Greenland.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Riboldi |first1=Jacopo |last2=Leeding |first2=Richard |last3=Segalini |first3=Antonio |last4=Messori |first4=Gabriele |date=2023-05-28 |title=Multiple Large-Scale Dynamical Pathways for Pan–Atlantic Compound Cold and Windy Extremes |journal=Geophysical Research Letters |language=en |volume=50 |issue=10 |doi=10.1029/2022GL102528 |issn=0094-8276|doi-access=free |bibcode=2023GeoRL..5002528R |hdl=20.500.11850/653329 |hdl-access=free }}</ref> In Europe, the advection of cold air masses from the northeast emerges as a potential precursor signal for the majority of cold waves, significantly affecting the energy, health, and agricultural sectors of the continent.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Quesada |first1=Benjamin |last2=Vautard |first2=Robert |last3=Yiou |first3=Pascal |date=2023-05-22 |title=Cold waves still matter: characteristics and associated climatic signals in Europe |journal=Climatic Change |language=en |volume=176 |issue=70 |doi=10.1007/s10584-023-03533-0 |issn=0930-7575|doi-access=free|bibcode=2023ClCh..176...70Q }}</ref>
Recent research suggests a possible link between cold waves and extratropical [[cyclogenesis]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Messori |first1=Gabriele |last2=Caballero |first2=Rodrigo |last3=Gaetani |first3=Marco |title=On cold spells in North America and storminess in western Europe |journal=Geophysical Research Letters |date=2016 |volume=43 |issue=12 |pages=6620–6628 |doi=10.1002/2016GL069392|doi-access=free }}</ref>


==Countermeasures==
==Countermeasures==
In some places, such as [[Siberia]], extreme cold requires that fuel-powered machinery to be used even part-time must be run continuously. Internal plumbing can be wrapped, and persons can often run water continuously through pipes. Energy conservation, difficult as it is in a cold wave, may require such measures as collecting people (especially the poor and elderly) in communal shelters. Even the [[homelessness|homeless]] may be [[arrest]]ed and taken to shelters, only to be released when the hazard abates.<ref name="paducah_nws">{{cite web|url=http://www.finlex.fi/fi/laki/ajantasa/1995/19950493|title=Police law of Finland 11§|language=fi|access-date=2008-09-25}}</ref> Hospitals can prepare for the admission of victims of frostbite and hypothermia; schools and other public buildings can be converted into shelters.
In some places, such as [[Siberia]], extreme cold requires that fuel-powered machinery intended to be used occasionally must be run continually. Internal plumbing can be wrapped, and persons can often run water continuously through pipes. Energy conservation, difficult as it is in a cold wave, may require such measures as collecting people (especially the poor and elderly) in communal shelters. Even the [[homelessness|homeless]] may be [[arrest]]ed and taken to shelters, only to be released when the hazard abates.<ref name="paducah_nws">{{cite web|url=http://www.finlex.fi/fi/laki/ajantasa/1995/19950493|title=Police law of Finland 11§|language=fi|access-date=2008-09-25}}</ref> Hospitals can prepare for the admission of victims of frostbite and hypothermia; schools and other public buildings can be converted into shelters.


People can stock up on food, water, and other necessities before a cold wave. Some may even choose to migrate to places of milder climates, at least during the winter. Suitable stocks of forage can be secured before cold waves for livestock, and livestock in vulnerable areas might be shipped from affected areas or even slaughtered. [[Smudge pot]]s can bring smoke that prevents hard freezes on a farm or grove. Vulnerable crops may be sprayed with water that will paradoxically protect the plants by freezing and absorbing the cold from surrounding air.
People can stock up on food, water, and other necessities before a cold wave. Some may even choose to migrate to places of milder climates, at least during the winter. Suitable stocks of forage can be secured before cold waves for livestock, and livestock in vulnerable areas might be shipped from affected areas or even slaughtered. [[Smudge pot]]s can bring smoke that prevents hard freezes on a farm or grove. Vulnerable crops may be sprayed with water that will paradoxically protect the plants by freezing and absorbing the cold from surrounding air.


Most people can dress appropriately and can even layer their clothing should they need to go outside or should their heating fail. They can also stock candles, matches, flashlights, and portable fuel for cooking and wood for fireplaces or wood stoves, as necessary. However, caution should be taken as the use of charcoal fires for cooking or heating within an enclosed dwelling is extremely dangerous due to [[carbon monoxide poisoning]]. Adults must remain aware of the exposure that children and the elderly have to cold.
Most people can dress appropriately and can layer their clothing should they need to go outside or should their heating fail. They can also stock candles, matches, flashlights, and portable fuel for cooking and wood for fireplaces or wood stoves, as necessary. However, caution should be taken as the use of charcoal fires for cooking or heating within an enclosed dwelling is extremely dangerous due to [[carbon monoxide poisoning]]. Adults must remain aware of the exposure that children and the elderly have to cold.


==Historical cold waves==
==Historical cold waves==


===21st-century cold waves (2001–present)===
===17th century cold waves (1601–1700)===
* [[Great Frost of 1683–84]], the worst frost in England in its history. The cold caused the entire [[River Thames]] to freeze up to a depth of {{convert|1|ft}}. The frost enabled the [[River Thames Frost Fair]]. See [[Maunder Minimum]]
* Europe winter of 1694–1695. See [[Maunder Minimum]]


===18th century cold waves (1701–1800)===
'''2021'''
* [[Great Frost of 1709]], the coldest winter in Europe ever recorded.
*February 2021: [[February 2021 Middle East cold wave]]
*February 2021: [[February 2021 European cold wave]]
*February 2021: [[February 2021 North American cold wave]]
* January 2021: Severe cold wave hit many regions in [[Eurasia]], especially in the Iberian Peninsula, Central Asia, East Asia and Southeast Asia with some of the lowest temperatures in many years. In Spain, Clot del Tuc de la Llanca in Aragon in the Spanish Pyrenees recorded −34.1&nbsp;°C in January 6. It was not only the new national lowest temperature record in Spain, 2&nbsp;°C lower than the previous record in 1956, but also the lowest temperature in the whole [[Iberian Peninsula]] ever recorded. On the 9th of January another new record was attained with -35.6&nbsp;°C in Vega de Liordes, in the Cantabrian mountains of Spain. The cold wave was concurrent with a [[2021 snowstorm in Madrid|historic snowstorm]] which covered Madrid under 50 to 60&nbsp;cm of snow, the first time since 1971.
[[Novosibirsk]] reached a low of -41&nbsp;°C. [[Beijing]] recorded a low of -19.6&nbsp;°C which was the coldest since 1966. [[Seoul]] also recorded -18.6&nbsp;°C in January 8 which was the tie record with 2001 and the coldest since 1986. Over 200&nbsp;cm of snow fell in western Japan along the Japan Sea coast.


===19th century cold waves (1801–1900)===
'''2020'''
* October 2020: The [[Rocky Mountains]] and [[Great Plains]] of the United States experienced record-cold temperatures. Subzero Fahrenheit temperatures (< -18&nbsp;°C) were recorded in [[Montana]], [[Wyoming]], [[Colorado]], and [[Nebraska]]. [[Bozeman, Montana]] reached {{convert|-20|F|C}} and [[Denver]], Colorado reached {{convert|4|F|C}}.<ref>https://www.accuweather.com/en/winter-weather/bitter-cold-obliterates-records-in-western-us-as-storm-dumps-snow-ice/837913</ref>
* May 2020: Following a mild winter for much of the Eastern United States, a cold wave brought record breaking low May temperatures and some snow; temperature departures of 10-15&nbsp;°F (5-8&nbsp;°C) were recorded across much of the Eastern seaboard. New York City saw its latest recorded snowfall on May 9, tied with 1977.<ref>{{Cite web|title=New York City Tied Its Record Latest Spring Snowfall, In One of Its Least Snowy Seasons|url=https://weather.com/safety/winter/news/2020-05-09-new-york-city-record-latest-snowfall|website=The Weather Channel|language=en-US|access-date=2020-05-15}}</ref> Nearby cities saw similar phenomena; towns in northern New England and New York recorded up to nine inches of snow.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Polar vortex brings rare May snow, low temps to New England {{!}} Boston.com|url=https://www.boston.com/news/local-news/2020/05/09/polar-vortex-brings-rare-may-snow-low-temps-to-new-england|website=www.boston.com|language=en-US|access-date=2020-05-15}}</ref>
* February 2020: 2nd time snow falls in [[Baghdad]] since the 1910s.<ref name= baghdadsnowfall>https://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/baghdad-sees-snow-for-the-1st-time-in-12-years/679070</ref>
*January 2020: [[Pakistan]]


'''2019'''
'''1835'''
* Eastern cold wave of January and February 1835. First of three historic U.S. cold waves to hit during the 19th century (1835, 1857, 1899). In January, mercury thermometers froze throughout the Northeast. Mercury froze at {{cvt|-40|F}} in Bangor and Bath, Maine and Montpelier and White River, Vermont. In Connecticut, Hartford hit {{cvt|-27|F}} and New Haven {{cvt|-23|F}}, and in Massachusetts, Williamstown hit {{cvt|-30|F}} and Pittsfield {{cvt|-32|F}}, all low temperature marks that have never been matched since. In February, Savannah, Georgia the temperature hit {{cvt|0|F}}, {{cvt|8|F-change}} colder than would be reached during the 1899 cold wave later in the century and Charleston South Carolina hit {{cvt|2|F}}.<ref>Extreme Weather record book, 2007 edition, p. 60, Christopher Burt</ref>
* November 2019: November 2019 North American cold wave
* February 2019: Brought temperatures 10~15 degrees lower than the February average lows, and temperatures of {{convert|-40|C|F}} degrees to many parts of Siberia again. [[Novosibirsk]], the largest city in Asian Russia, lowered to {{convert|-40.1|C|F}} on 2 February, just a fraction of a degree shy to its previous record in 1977.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=29638&month=2&year=2019 | title=Погода в Новосибирске - климатический монитор за февраль 2019 года}}</ref> [[Krasnoyarsk]] also lowered to {{convert|-41.3|C|F}} on 4 February, missing just 0.3&nbsp;°C to its record in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=29570&month=2&year=2019 | title=Погода в Красноярске - климатический монитор за февраль 2019 года}}</ref> [[Irkutsk]] Oblast had also recorded very low temperatures, with Irkutsk hitting {{convert|-37.7|C|F}} on 6 February, beating its previous record of 6 February,<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=30710&month=2&year=2019 | title=Погода в Иркутске - климатический монитор за февраль 2019 года}}</ref> [[Bratsk]] has seen temperatures below {{convert|-41.5|C|F}} on February 5, which is sometimes colder than cities like [[Yakutsk]]. 7 and 8 February was even more brutal, with [[Omsk]] as low as {{convert|-39.0|C|F}},<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=28698&month=2&year=2019 | title=Погода в Омске - климатический монитор за февраль 2019 года}}</ref> and a merciless record low {{convert|-41.9|C|F}} in [[Novokuznetsk]], just 0.3&nbsp;°C short of the record low in 1969.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=29842&month=2&year=2019 | title=Погода в Новокузнецке - климатический монитор за февраль 2019 года}}</ref> Lowest temperature in the cold wave of {{convert|-53.6|C|F}} was recorded in [[Vanavara (rural locality)|Vanavara]]<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=24908&month=2&year=2019 | title=Погода в Ванаваре - климатический монитор за февраль 2019 года}}</ref> The cold wave also lightly affected the [[Russian Far East]] and some parts North America. California experienced an unusually wet and cold February, where Los Angeles experienced its coldest February since 1962.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-cold-february-20190225-story.html|title=February is coldest in Los Angeles in nearly 60 years|date=2019-02-25}}</ref>
* In late January, an [[January 2019 North American cold wave|extreme cold wave]] hit [[Canada]] and the [[Midwestern United States|midwest]] of the United States, bringing temperatures below {{convert|-30.0|C|F|abbr=}}, with all-time record lows set in several cities.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/2192369-so-far-2019-has-set-35-records-for-heat-and-2-for-cold/ |title = So far 2019 has set 35 records for heat and 2 for cold}}</ref>


'''2018'''
'''1836'''
*Last reported snowfall in [[Sydney]], Australia occurred on 28 June of that year. British settlers in [[Hyde Park, Sydney|Hyde Park]] woke up to snow "nearly {{convert|1|inch|cm|abbr=on}} deep", with the meteorological table in ''[[The Sydney Herald]]'' recording that on the morning of the snow the temperature dropped to {{convert|3|C}}.<ref>[https://climatehistory.com.au/2011/12/06/1836-snow-in-sydney/ 1836: Snow in Sydney] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220216015225/https://climatehistory.com.au/2011/12/06/1836-snow-in-sydney/ |date=16 February 2022 }} CLIMATE HISTORY AUSTRALIA</ref>


'''1857'''
* Around Early December 2018, some slight cold waves attacked Central Russia and Kazakhstan, bringing temperatures several of degrees down from the average norm. Big cities like [[Novosibirsk]], [[Krasnoyarsk]], [[Omsk]], [[Irkutsk]], and [[Barnaul]] regions had experienced severe temperatures of minus tens of degrees.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=29638&month=12&year=2018 |title = Погода в Новосибирске - климатический монитор за декабрь 2018 года}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=28698&month=12&year=2018 |title = Погода в Омске - климатический монитор за декабрь 2018 года}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=29570&month=12&year=2018 |title = Погода в Красноярске - климатический монитор за декабрь 2018 года}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=30309&month=12&year=2018 |title = Погода в Братске - климатический монитор за декабрь 2018 года}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=29838&month=12&year=2018 |title = Погода в Барнауле - климатический монитор за декабрь 2018 года}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=29430&month=12&year=2018 |title = Погода в Томске - климатический монитор за декабрь 2018 года}}</ref> The cold wave dissipated on December 13~15, making it slightly warmer, but returned some time in Christmas, attacking Central Russia and Kazakhstan strongly again, before finally dissipating around New Year's Eve. [[Yerbogachen]] suffered the cruelest temperatures of {{convert|-52.5|C|F}} on Christmas.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=24817&month=12&year=2018 |title = Погода в Ербогачене - климатический монитор за декабрь 2018 года}}</ref> This cold wave made December 2018 quite chilly for Siberia.
* New England Cold wave of 1857. January 1857 was the coldest month ever recorded in New England. Average month temperatures of {{cvt|16.7|F}} in New Haven, {{cvt|16.8|F}} in Boston, and {{cvt|19.6|F}} in New York City remain coldest months on record in those cities. The worst of the cold descended on New England on January 22 with January 23 being one of the coldest days known in the region. In Bath, Maine a temperature reading of {{cvt|-52|F}} and in Franconia, New Hampshire {{cvt|-51|F}} were recorded. In Norwich, Vermont {{cvt|-44|F}} was recorded. Boston suburbs of Malden and West Newton recorded {{cvt|-30|F}} overnight. Boston temperatures for January 23 never rose above {{cvt|0|F}} all day and Nantucket Island was connected to the mainland by ice. In New York City, Erasmus Hall in Brooklyn reached a high of 0&nbsp;°F during the day and the Hudson River froze over solidly enough for people to walk across to Hoboken.<ref>Extreme Weather record book, 2007 edition, pp. 61-62, Christopher Burt</ref>
* [[2018 Great Britain and Ireland cold wave|Late February and early–mid March 2018]], Europe. Easterly winds created bitter conditions twice during early spring 2018. Snow fell during both events. [[Storm Emma (2018)|Storm Emma]], which affected southern areas of Great Britain, brought up to {{convert|50|cm|in}} of snow.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-43236763|title=Storm Emma to bring up to 50cm of snow|date=2 March 2018|access-date=2 March 2018|work=BBC News}}</ref> Overall, 93 people across Europe died; 27 deaths occurred in Poland and 17 in the UK.


'''2017–2018'''
'''1859'''
* January 1859: January 10 – coldest single daytime temperatures ever recorded experienced in New York City and in New England areas. Montreal recorded temperature of {{cvt|-43.6|F}} at 7&nbsp;am, some {{cvt|15|F-change}} degrees lower than modern Montreal record of {{cvt|-29|F}} in 1933. Toronto recorded {{cvt|-27|F}} on the same day. At the University of Vermont in Burlington, {{cvt|-31.5|F}} was recorded at 7&nbsp;am and {{cvt|-26|F}} at 2&nbsp;pm. In Woodstock, Vermont a temperature of {{cvt|-45|F}} was recorded. Harvard College recorded {{cvt|-4.5|F}} at 2&nbsp;pm and {{cvt|-18|F}} the next morning of January 11, the lowest known temperature reading recorded in Boston. Nantucket Island measured {{cvt|-12|F}}, {{cvt|6|F-change}} colder than the modern known record. In New York City, recorded temperatures did not go above {{cvt|0|F}}. In Brooklyn Heights, a recorded reading of {{cvt|-9|F}} at noon and in Eramus Hall in Brooklyn recorded a high of {{cvt|-3.7|F}} at 7&nbsp;am and {{cvt|-8|F}} at 9&nbsp;pm that night. Union Hall in Jamaica Queens recorded {{cvt|-12|F}} at midnight between January 10 and 11. In White Plains, there were readings of {{cvt|-13|F}} at 7&nbsp;am, {{cvt|-10|F}} at 2&nbsp;pm, and {{cvt|-15|F}} at 9&nbsp;pm.<ref>Extreme Weather record book, 2007 edition, p. 61, Christopher Burt</ref>
* [[2018 North American cold wave|Cold wave starting late December 2017]] (December 24 respectively), [[North America]]. A persistent wave of temperature extremes, including a cold wave, took place in Canada and the northeastern and central areas of the United States from Northern Canada to Mississippi, with temperatures in much of Canada of around {{convert|-29|C|F}} and as low as {{convert|-39|C|F}} in New York state, and as high as {{convert|21|C|F}} and {{convert|31|C|F}} in Sandberg and Los Angeles, respectively, in California.<ref name="Indep_NAmer20171230">{{cite news | last1=Sampathkumar | first1=Mythili | title=North America weather: Canadian zoo moves penguins indoors because of cold temperatures | date=2017-12-30 | work=[[The Independent]] | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/calgary-zoo-penguins-cold-weather-canada-a8135121.html | access-date=2017-12-31 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171230221149/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/calgary-zoo-penguins-cold-weather-canada-a8135121.html | archive-date=2017-12-30 | url-status=dead }}</ref>
* Cold wave of November 9–12, 2017. Record lows were broken from Minneapolis to DC as Arctic air swept through the areas.{{citation needed|date=December 2017}}


'''2017'''
'''1874–1875'''
* Winter 1874–1875 in Mid-Western United States.
* [[January 2017 European cold wave]] – A cold wave hit Central and East Europe on January 5. The lowest temperature was {{convert|-45.4|C|F}} degrees.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.meteovesti.ru/news/63619645752-poteplenie-priblizhaetsya|title=Потепление приближается|language=ru|trans-title=The warming is coming|access-date=11 January 2017}}</ref> The cold caused at least 60 deaths. There was also massive snowfall.
* April 2017 - During the same year, low temperatures were recorded in [[Sarajevo]] from an unusual snowfall that hit the city disrupting the traffic since [[Early 2012 European cold wave|the 2012 cold wave]].<ref>http://www.sarajevotimes.com/snow-april-bosnia-herzegovina/</ref>


'''2016'''
'''1882–1883'''
* Winter 1882–1883 in United States.
* [[January 2016 East Asia cold wave]] – Caused over 100 known deaths across [[East Asia]], [[South Asia]] and [[Southeast Asia]].


'''2014–2015'''
'''1886–1887'''
* [[Winter of 1886–87]] in the United States Great Plains and Upper Midwest.
* [[2014–15 North American winter#Mid-February winter storm and cold wave|February 2015 North American cold wave]] – During the second half of February 2015, temperature records were broken in both sides of the spectrum. Extreme warm records were broken in the western half of the United States and extreme cold records were broken in the eastern half. In addition to the extreme cold wave at its most brutal in the Great Lakes, Mid-Atlantic, and New England, snowfall was reported as far south as [[Tupelo, Mississippi]]; [[Huntsville, Alabama]]; and [[Shreveport, Louisiana]]. The cold wave became widespread and all the remaining mild conditions from the west were pushed into northern Mexico. The cold wave even extended well into early March, with a part of every U.S. state except [[Florida]] reporting a snow cover by March 1, 2015.
* [[November 2014 North American cold wave]] – Between November 8 and November 23, a polar vortex similar to earlier in 2014 has a temporary comeback, delivering the 2014–15 winter season's first three significant winter storms in the United States. Snowfall records were confirmed all over the Midwest and the Northeast, especially around the Great Lakes. [[Buffalo, New York]], was among the hardest hit in the unseasonably wintry November. In addition to not being Thanksgiving yet, autumn colors were in the mix along with the deep winter snow.


'''2013–2014'''
'''1888'''
* [[1888 Northwest United States cold wave|1888 US cold wave]] – A severe cold wave that passed through the Pacific Northwest. It led to a blizzard for the northern Plains and upper Mississippi valley where many children were trapped in schoolhouses where they froze to death.


'''1893'''
* [[Early 2014 North American cold wave]] – On January 2–11, cold arctic air initially associated with a [[nor'easter]] invaded the central and eastern United States and Canada, east of the Rockies. Temperatures were even colder than the North Pole and the South Pole in many regions in the Upper Midwest and Canada. Temperatures reached as cold as {{cvt|−37|F|C}}, and did not even get out of the negative double-digit temps in many places, including [[Chicago, Illinois|Chicago]]. The cold wave extended for a few more months, bringing a continuous pattern of record-low temperatures to most of the Central and upper eastern United States, before the pattern finally ended in early April.
* 1893 East Asia Cold Wave – Produced snow in [[Hong Kong]] and South China, and freezing temperatures into tropical latitudes.
* [[2013–14 North American winter#December cold wave|December 2013 North American cold wave]] – On December 1, the weakening of the polar vortex resulted in the jet stream shifting southward, which allowed abnormally cold temperatures to intrude the [[Central United States]]. On December 6, a daily record snowfall of {{convert|0.1|in|}} was set in the [[Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex]], breaking the old record of trace amounts of snow, set in 1950.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wunderground.com/US/tx/dallas.html |title=Dallas, TX Weather Forecast from Weather Underground |publisher=Wunderground.com |access-date=2013-12-06}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://weather.wfaa.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?brand=wfaa&target=wfaa&query=Dallas,TX |title=Dallas, Texas (75201) Conditions & Forecast |publisher=Weather.wfaa.com |access-date=2013-12-06 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131211011500/http://weather.wfaa.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?brand=wfaa&target=wfaa&query=Dallas%2CTX |archive-date=2013-12-11 }}</ref> The cold wave continued into December 10, before the temperatures returned to a more stable range.
* 1893 Eastern United States Cold Wave.


'''2013'''
'''1895'''
* February 1895 United States Cold Wave ([[Great Freeze]]) – Damaged citrus crops in Florida. A snowstorm produced unprecedented snowfall amounts along the Gulf Coast, including 22 inches (56&nbsp;cm) in [[Houston, TX]]. Snow fell as far south as [[Tampico, Mexico]], the lowest latitude in North America that snow has been recorded at sea level.
* [[2013 extreme weather events#United Kingdom|United Kingdom March–April 2013]] – The UK Spring 2013 cold wave was a prolonged spell of cold weather which brought with it very heavy snowfalls, the worst in March for 30 years and since 1947 in some places. There was also some very cold temperatures with England (CET) having its coldest March since 1883 with a mean monthly temperature of {{cvt|2.7|C}}. This meant that March was colder than all three winter months December 2012, January and February 2013. The cold weather in March came after what was a relatively cold winter however nothing like 2010–11, 2009–10 or 2008–09.
* [[Winter of 1894–95 in the United Kingdom]].
{{anchor |Spring 2013 North American cold wave}}
* Spring 2013 North American cold wave – Although the core winter of 2012–13 was fairly mild, both March and April were unusually cold across the Midwest, resulting in sharp temperature contrasts from March 2012 to March 2013 all over the United States and Canada. This late cold wave was unexpected because February and March 2013 were both forecasted to be even milder and more springlike than February and March 2012, but instead turned out with a near-average February and an unusually cold March. This same cold wave extended well into the month of April, as four notable winter storms impacted much of the northern United States, especially across Minnesota and the Dakotas. Minnesota experienced a rare May snowstorm as a result of this cold wave.
* In July 2013, South America experienced the most intense cold wave in 13 years. Some coastal areas of Argentina and Uruguay had multiple days of nearly freezing temperatures, and snow fell throughout Southern Brazil, even being registered in [[Curitiba]] for the first time in 38 years.
* [[2013 Middle East cold snap]] - [[Cyprus]], [[Egypt]], [[Israel]], [[West Bank]], [[Jordan]], [[Lebanon]] and [[Syria]].


'''2012'''
'''1899'''
* [[Great Blizzard of 1899|February 1899 Cold Wave]] – Still ranked as number one cold wave outbreak in U.S. history to date.<ref name="weather.com"/>
* [[Early 2012 European cold wave]] – As of February 11, 2012 at least 590 people died during a cold snap with temperatures falling below {{convert|-35|C|F}} in some regions.<ref name="Pidd, Helen & Elder, Helen">{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/feb/03/europe-cold-energy-death-toll|title=European cold snap threatens energy crisis as death toll rises|first1=Helen|last1=Pidd|first2=Miriam|last2=Elder|date=3 February 2012|website=The Guardian|access-date=20 January 2018}}</ref> [[Ukraine]] was the worst hit, with over 100 deaths related to the cold.<ref>[http://www.kyivpost.com/news/nation/detail/121772/ Kyiv Post: Ukraine Cold Spell Death Toll Rises 101] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120204232211/http://www.kyivpost.com/news/nation/detail/121772/ |date=February 4, 2012 }}</ref>


===20th-century cold waves (1901–2000)===
'''2010–2011'''
*[[2011 New Zealand snowstorms]]- Caused by Antarctic storms moving upward, the whole country was affected briefly in July 2011, only for it to return even stronger in August for a prolonged period of time. Te Waipounamu/ The South Island was the hardest hit, although the generally more mild Te Ika-a-Maui/ The North Island was also affected to a large extent. Widespread and heavy snow fell in Wellington for the first time in twenty years, and in Auckland the first time since the 1930s. Despite blizzards, closures and multiple records broken, morale was up, and most Kiwis, especially children, weren't that bothered about the whole snow situation<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nzherald.co.nz/|title=Snow falls in Auckland for first time in decades|last=Wade|first=NZPA, Amelia|newspaper=The New Zealand Herald|date=2011-08-15|access-date=2019-01-30|language=en-NZ|issn=1170-0777}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://storyful.com/stories/1000006477|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140201194052/http://storyful.com/stories/1000006477|url-status=dead|archive-date=2014-02-01|title=Kiwis marvel at Auckland and Wellington snow - Storyful|date=2014-02-01|access-date=2019-01-30}}</ref>
*[[Winter of 2010–11 in Great Britain and Ireland]] – This winter was referred to as The Big Freeze by national media in both United Kingdom and Ireland and it was the coldest winter in Britain for 31 years with an average temperature of {{convert|1.51|C|lk=on}}. The UK had its coldest December ever, since records began in 1910, with a mean temperature of {{convert|-1|°C|1}}. It easily broke the previous record of {{convert|0.1|°C|2}}, set in December 1981.


'''2009–2010'''
'''1904'''
* The winter of 1904 was the coolest year on record worldwide.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://mashable.com/article/climate-change-cold-records-rare/ |title = Earth's coldest years on record all happened over 90 years ago|website = [[Mashable]]|date = 9 February 2019}}</ref>
* A cold wave affected much of the [[Deep South]] in the United States and [[Florida]] in January and February 2010.
* [[Winter of 2009–10 in Great Britain and Ireland]] – The '''winter of 2009–10 in the United Kingdom''' (also called '''''The Big Freeze''''' by [[British media]]) was a meteorological event that started on 16 December 2009, as part of the [[Winter of 2009–10 in Europe|severe winter weather in Europe]]. January 2010 was provisionally the coldest January since 1987 across the country.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/2010/january.html|title=January 2010|publisher=The [[Met Office]]|access-date=20 February 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120117191208/http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/2010/january.html|archive-date=17 January 2012}}</ref> A persistent pattern of cold northerly and easterly winds brought cold, moist air to the [[United Kingdom]] with many snow showers, fronts and polar lows bringing snowy weather with it.


'''1912'''
The first snowfall began on 17 December 2009, before a respite over the Christmas period.<ref name="summary">{{Cite news |title=Snow and low temperatures – December 2009 to January 2010 |url=http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/interesting/jan2010/ |work=www.metoffice.gov.uk |access-date=9 September 2011}}</ref> The most severe snowy weather began on 5 January in [[North West England]] and west Scotland with temperatures hitting a low of {{convert|-17.6|°C|1}} in [[Greater Manchester]], England.<ref>{{Cite news |title=Minus 17.6C – Big freeze sets new record |url=http://menmedia.co.uk/manchestereveningnews/news/s/1188272_minus_176c__big_freeze_sets_new_record |newspaper=Manchester Evening News |date=7 January 2010 |access-date=9 September 2011}}</ref> The snow spread to Southern England on 6 January and by 7 January the United Kingdom was blanketed in snow,<ref name="summary"/> which was captured by [[NASA]]'s [[Terra (satellite)|Terra satellite]].<ref>{{Cite news |title=Frozen Britain seen from above |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8447023.stm |work=BBC News |date=7 January 2010 |access-date=5 December 2011}}</ref> The thaw came a week later, as temperatures started to increase.<ref name="summary"/> The winter weather brought widespread transport disruption, school closures, power failures, the postponement of sporting events and 25&nbsp;deaths. A low of {{convert|-22.3|°C|1}} was recorded in [[Altnaharra]], [[Scotland]] on 8 January 2010. Overall it was the coldest winter since 1978–79, with a mean temperature of {{convert|1.5|°C|1}}.
* January 1912 cold wave – The severe [[1912 United States cold wave]] caused the longest recorded period of weather below {{convert|0|F|C|1|disp=or}}.
* [[December 2009 European snowfall|2009–10 European cold wave]] – At least ninety were confirmed dead after record low temperatures and heavy snowfall across Europe causes travel disruption to much of the continent including the [[British Isles]], France, the [[Low Countries]], Germany, Austria, Italy, [[Poland]], the [[Baltic States]], the [[Balkans]], [[Ukraine]] and Russia. It was the coldest winter and longest cold spell for thirty years in the United Kingdom, whilst temperatures in the Italian [[Alps|Alpine]] peaks reached low to an extreme of {{convert|-47|°C|1}}.
{{anchor |Early 2009 European Cold Wave}}
* [[February 2009 Great Britain and Ireland snowfall]] – The '''February 2009 Great Britain and Ireland snowfall''' was a prolonged period of [[Winter storm#Snow|snowfall]] that began on 1 February 2009. Some areas experienced their [[Winter of 1990–1991 in Western Europe|largest snowfall levels in 18 years]].<ref name="http1">{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7864395.stm |title=UK &#124; Heavy snow hits much of Britain |work=BBC News |date=2 February 2009 |access-date=6 February 2009}}</ref> Snow fell over much of Western Europe.<ref name="Blanket of snow over much of Europe">{{cite web|url=http://www.rte.ie/news/2009/0202/europeweather.html|title=Blanket of snow over much of Europe|date=2 February 2009|access-date=6 February 2009|publisher=[[Raidió Teilifís Éireann|RTÉ]]}}</ref> The [[United Kingdom]]'s [[Met Office]] and [[Republic of Ireland|Ireland's]] [[Met Éireann]] issued severe weather warnings in anticipation of the snowfall. More than {{convert|30|cm|0}} of snow fell on parts of the [[North Downs]] and over {{convert|20|cm|0}} in parts of the London area.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2009/feb/02/snow-london-travel-chaos |title=Heavy snow to cause travel chaos all week &#124; UK news &#124; guardian.co.uk |publisher=Guardian |date= 2 February 2009|access-date=6 February 2009 | location=London | first=Audrey | last=Gillan}}</ref> Such snow accumulation is uncommon in London.<ref name="msnbc1">{{cite web|url=http://www.nbcnews.com/id/28972533 |title=Snow causes London to slow to crawl|work=NBC News |date=2 February 2009 |access-date=6 February 2009}}</ref> On the morning of 6 February the majority of Great Britain and Ireland had snow cover, with the area surrounding the [[Bristol Channel]] ([[South Wales]] ([[Cardiff]] area) and [[South West England]] ([[Bristol]] area)) being most affected – {{convert|55|cm}} had settled overnight around [[Okehampton]], [[Devon]], [[South West England]] with similar depths in South Wales. In Ireland the highest totals were recorded around East Kildare and [[County Wicklow|Wicklow County]]'s were up to {{convert|11|in|cm}} fell around [[Naas]], [[County Kildare]] and even more along the [[Wicklow Mountains]]. The last time such widespread snowfall affected Britain was in February 1991.<ref>{{cite news|author=Richard Allen Greene and Olivia Feld CNN |url=http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/europe/02/02/europe.snow/index.html |title=Heaviest UK snow in 18 years hits international flights |publisher=CNN.com |date= 7 February 2009|access-date=6 February 2009}}</ref> On the 2nd a total of {{convert|32|cm|0}} had fallen in [[Leatherhead]], [[Surrey]] just south of the [[M25 motorway|M25]]. Also {{convert|30|cm|0}} had fallen over the [[South Downs]] and {{convert|26|cm|0}} in higher areas of [[Brighton]].
* Early 2009 European Cold Wave – Early January gave most of Europe, especially in central and south very cold temperatures. Some places like Germany, France, Italy, [[Romania]] and Spain had record cold temperatures well below {{convert|0|°C}}. Most of the places were covered in snow and ice which caused school closings and airport delays. Large cities like [[Paris]], [[Madrid]], [[Berlin]] and even [[Marseille]] saw very cold temperatures with much snow and ice in [[Northern Italy]], most of Germany, in northern [[Portugal]] and even along the coasts of the [[Mediterranean]]. In early February another cold front brought heavy snowfall to much of Western Europe with the heaviest snow falling in France, Northern Italy, the Low Countries and the United Kingdom, where parts of [[Southern England]] had seen the worst snowfall in over eighteen years causing widespread travel disruption particularly around [[London]].


'''2008'''
'''1916-1917'''
*Winter of 1916–1917 – the "extended winter" (October to March) of 1916–17 was the coldest on record in the West and Midwest.
* 2008 Alaska cold wave – In early February, Alaska experienced the coldest temperatures for eight years, with [[Fairbanks]] nearing {{convert|-50|°F|°C|1}} and [[Chicken, Alaska]] bottoming out at {{convert|-72|°F|°C|1}}, a mere {{convert|8|F-change|1|spell=in}} away from the record of {{convert|-80|°F|°C|1}}. The first half of January also brought unusual cold weather and heavy snow to widespread regions of China and the [[Middle East]], snowfall was present in [[Baghdad]] for the first time since the 1910s.<ref name= baghdadsnowfall/>
* 2008 Greece cold wave February 16 - most significant cold wave that lasted three days after 2002 - On February 14 a massive high pressure system between Greenland and Scandinavia extended from Arctic Ocean to west Mediterranean accompanied by a massive low pressure system in Siberia resulting in a cold air mass in eastern Europe reaching Greece on February 16.The cold air that moved over Aegean sea caused lake effect snow dropping more than 40&nbsp;cm of snow in Athens in Chaidari district west of downtown.Cold wave caused major disruption to the city and a lot of flights were cancelled due to bad weather conditions.<ref>{{cite web |title=2008/02 |url=https://antisimvatikos.blogspot.com/2008/02/2008.html |website=antisimvatikos.blogspot |access-date=20 June 2021 |ref=1}}</ref>


'''2007'''
'''1917-1918'''
* Winter of 1917–1918 – The winter was very frigid across the East and created a heating fuel crisis equaled only in January 1977. Severe cold wave in December 1917 and January 1918 in northeast. December 30 set a number of record lows at the time in New York City ({{cvt|−13|F|disp=comma}}) and Boston ({{cvt|−15|F|disp=comma}}).<ref>Wagner, A. James. "The Record-Breaking Winter of 1976–77". ''Weatherwise'' 30 (1977), no. 2, pp. 65–69</ref> Under ideal conditions for radiational cooling, including fresh snow cover and mostly clear skies, the morning of December 30, 1917, was exceptionally cold also in parts of Virginia and West Virginia, with all-time record cold temperatures (that stand until nowadays) recorded in many cities, including {{cvt|-37|F}} at Lewisburg (West Virginia state record), {{cvt|-34|F}} at White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, {{cvt|-25|F}} at Bluefield, West Virginia, and {{cvt|-27|F}} at Blacksburg and Burke's Garden, Virginia. January 1918 also brought persistent well below average temperatures for many parts of the East and Midwest, with another shot of very cold air in early February (New York City Central Park's high of only {{cvt|4|F}} on February 5 is a monthly record, while Michigan's Houghton Lake reached a low of {{cvt|-48|F}} on February 1). The [[Ohio River]] froze solidly along its entire length.
* 2007 Northern Hemisphere cold wave – All of Canada and most of the United States underwent a freeze after a two-week warming that took place in late March and early April. Crops froze, wind picked up, and snow drizzled much of the United States. Some parts of Europe also experienced unusual cold winter-like temperatures, during that time.
* This cold wave occurred not only in America but also East Asia. In Seoul, the weather was warm in early December 1917, but the temperature didn't go above ({{cvt|32|F|disp=comma}}) during the cold wave from December 15&ndash;January 9. In addition, the temperature went lower than ({{cvt|14|F|disp=comma}}) from December 15&ndash;31. The cold wave was especially fierce from December 26&ndash;27 and the low temperature on December 26 was ({{cvt|0.32|F|disp=comma}}), while the high temperature was ({{cvt|9.86|F|disp=comma}}). That day Incheon recorded a high temperature of ({{cvt|9.14|F|disp=comma}}), this was the 3rd lowest high temperature recorded during winter. Also, the low temperature on December 27 was ({{cvt|−4.72|F|disp=comma}}), this temperature is 2nd coldest temperature recorded in December in Seoul. (The lowest was ({{cvt|-9.58|F|disp=comma}}) on December 31, 1927). The cold wave continued into January 1918, where it intensified. The low temperature on January 3 was ({{cvt|−7.24|F|disp=comma}}). The temperature was a slightly warmer on January 14, but the weather was still quite cold, and the low temperatures were at ({{cvt|14|F|disp=comma}}) or lower until January 28. Leading into February, this cold wave dissipated. Seoul was had an average temperature of ({{cvt|21.74|F|disp=comma}}) in December 1917, the lowest average recorded in December, and recorded an average temperature of ({{cvt|18.5|F|disp=comma}}) in January 1918, the 6th lowest recorded in January.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://data.kma.go.kr/data/grnd/selectAsosRltmList.do?pgmNo=36|title=Korea weather data(1904~)(was served Korea Meteorological Administration)}}</ref>
* [[July 2007 Argentine winter storm]] – An interaction with an area of low pressure systems across [[Argentina]] during July 6, 7 and 8 of 2007, and the entry of a massive polar [[July 2007 Argentine winter storm|cold snap]] resulted in severe [[snowfall]]s and [[blizzard]]s, and recorded temperatures below {{convert|−32|°C}}. The cold snap advanced from the south towards the central zone of the country, continuing its displacement towards the north during Saturday, July 7. On Monday, July 9, the simultaneous presence of very cold air, gave place to the occurrence of snowfalls. This phenomenon left at least 23&nbsp;people dead.<ref>Cormier, Bill, [https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/09/AR2007070901559.html Buenos Aires Gets First Snow Since 1918], [[Associated Press]] (July 7, 2007).</ref><ref>[http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/06/01/business/LA-FIN-Argentina-Energy-Woes.php Cold snap in Argentina leads to energy crunch that idles factories, triggers blackouts], AP via ''[[International Herald Tribune]]'', May 31, 2007 {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080531083110/http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/06/01/business/LA-FIN-Argentina-Energy-Woes.php |date=May 31, 2008 }}</ref>
* The cold wave also impacted North Korea, and the lowest temperature in Pyeongyang was ({{cvt|−11.74|F|disp=comma}})<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://kosis.kr/statHtml/statHtml.do?orgId=999&tblId=DT_999N_012136&vw_cd=MT_CHOSUN_TITLE&list_id=999_Q02_A01_1&scrId=&seqNo=&lang_mode=ko&obj_var_id=&itm_id=&conn_path=K1&path=%25EA%25B5%25AD%25ED%2586%25A0%25C2%25B7%25EA%25B8%25B0%25ED%259B%2584%2520%253E%2520%25EA%25B8%25B0%25EC%2583%2581%25EC%25B5%259C%25EC%25A0%2580%2520%25EA%25B8%25B0%25EC%2598%25A8|title=The lowest temperature statistic before 1945(was served Statistics Korea)}}</ref> in December 1917. Also, the average temperature was ({{cvt|12.56|F|disp=comma}}).)<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://kosis.kr/statHtml/statHtml.do?orgId=999&tblId=DT_999N_011136&vw_cd=MT_CHOSUN_TITLE&list_id=999_Q02_A01_1&scrId=&seqNo=&lang_mode=ko&obj_var_id=&itm_id=&conn_path=K1&path=%25EA%25B5%25AD%25ED%2586%25A0%25C2%25B7%25EA%25B8%25B0%25ED%259B%2584%2520%253E%2520%25EA%25B8%25B0%25EC%2583%2581%25ED%258F%2589%25EA%25B7%25A0%2520%25EA%25B8%25B0%25EC%2598%25A8|title=The month-average temperature statistic before 1945(was served Statistics Korea)}}</ref>


'''2005–2006'''
'''1930'''
* A cold wave gripped the western United States in January 1930. Two inches of snow fell in Palm Springs, CA on January 11, one of only two times in the city's history that snow was ever observed.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.weather.gov/media/sgx/Dayinhistory/dayhistory0111.pdf|title=This day in history, January 11|accessdate=20 February 2023}}</ref>
* [[2006 European cold wave|2005–06 European cold wave]] – Eastern Europe and Russia saw a very cold winter. Some of them saw their coldest on record or since the 1970s. Snow was in abundance in unusual places, such as in southern Spain and Northern Africa. All the winter months that season saw temperatures well below average across the continent.


'''2004–2005'''
'''1932'''
* Major cold outbreaks affected California in January, February and December. Up to two inches of snow fell across the Los Angeles Basin on January 15, and two inches of snow was officially recorded at the Downtown Los Angeles Weather Bureau Office.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.weather.gov/media/sgx/Dayinhistory/dayhistory0115.pdf|title=This day in history, January 15|accessdate=20 February 2023}}</ref> Snow also fell in San Francisco on three days in December 1932.
* 2004–2005 Southern Europe cold wave – All areas of Southern Europe saw an unusually hard winter. This area saw an [[ice storm]] which have a 1 in 1000 chance of happening.{{Citation needed|date=August 2007}} This cold front caused snow in [[Algeria]], which is extremely unusual. The south of Spain and Morocco also recorded freezing temperatures, and record freezing temperatures were observed in the north of Portugal and Spain.
* 2004 February cold wave in Greece on February 12th - coldest air mass to hit Greece in 21st century till today - a very cold air mass from north pole was pulled in eastern Europe because of a high pressure system in west Scandinavia extended to south Europe resulting in a low pressure system in the Balkans.The cold snap finally moved south hitting Greece and caused ' record low temperatures, frozen rain phenomenon, thundersnow in [[Athens]], snowfall that blanketed [[Crete]] island, snow that fell even in the most southern place of Greece in [[Gavdos]] island.During midnight of February 13 temperature in Athens dropped so fast that resulted in a frozen rain that ice- capped all trees, followed by a rare thundersnow phenomenon dropping 25&nbsp;cm of snow in central Athens and more than 50&nbsp;cm in eastern suburbs. In the morning of February 13 was recorded the lowest temperature of 21st century in the center of Athens till today of -5&nbsp;°C(23°F) degrees(some meteorological stations east of downtown on higher altitude recorded -7&nbsp;°C(19,4°F) ) resulting in water supply disruption and residents had to activate boilers and water heaters in order to make the water running again .<ref>{{cite web |title=2004/02 |url=https://antisimvatikos.blogspot.com/2004/02/blog-post.html |website=antisimvatikos.blogspot |access-date=20 June 2021 |ref=1}}</ref>
* 2004 January cold outbreak, Northeast United States – New England was close to a record month when frequent Arctic fronts caused unusually cold weather. [[Boston]] had its coldest January since 1893 ({{convert|19.7|F|C|disp=comma}}), when it averaged {{convert|20.7|F|C}}, and its lowest mean maximum at {{convert|27.2|F|C}}. [[Virginia Beach]] had an unusually long period of below [[freezing]] weather. Some areas of northern [[New York (state)|New York]] saw {{convert|150|in|m|2}} of snow in a month. Many parts of the western and midwestern area of the country seen the effect as well.


'''2002'''
'''1933'''
* [[1933 Western United States cold wave]] – The winter of 1932–33 was the second- or third-coldest on record<ref name="1976-77">Diaz, Henry F. and Quayle, Robert G. [http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/pdf/10.1175/1520-0493%281978%29106%3C1393%3ATWITCU%3E2.0.CO%3B2 "The 1976–77 Winter in the Contiguous United States in Comparison with Past Records"]. ''[[Monthly Weather Review]]'', 106 (1977), no. 10, pp. 1392–1422</ref> in most of the West (the coldest on record in Arizona<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cag/time-series/us/02/00/tavg/3/02/1896-2015?base_prd=true&firstbaseyear=1896&lastbaseyear=1976&trend=true&trend_base=10&firsttrendyear=1976&lasttrendyear=2015&filter=true&filterType=binomial|title=Climate at a Glance|publisher= National Centers for Environmental Information|access-date=20 January 2018}}</ref>) and saw record cold temperatures in Seneca, Oregon (-54&nbsp;°F/-48&nbsp;°C), Moran, Wyoming (-66&nbsp;°F/-54&nbsp;°C) and Seminole, Texas (-23&nbsp;°F/-31&nbsp;°F) between February 7 and 10,<ref name="record"/> when sixty deaths were blamed on extreme cold and ice storms.
* 2002 Cold wave in Greece January 4 - the first significant snowfall of 21st century in Athens,Greece occurred on January 4, lasted three days and caused major disruption to the city.The dense snowfall during midnight of January 5 left at least 15&nbsp;cm of snow on the ground only in downtown, north suburbs had more than 50&nbsp;cm !<ref>{{cite web |title=2002 cold wave |url=https://antisimvatikos.blogspot.com/2002/01/blog-post_06.html |website=antisimvatikos.blogspot |access-date=15 June 2021 |ref=1}}</ref>


'''1934'''
===20th-century cold waves (1901–2000)===
* February 1934 Cold Wave in New England and Eastern Canada – Longest period of cold weather ever experienced to this point. Average temperatures in upper New England and Eastern Canada were around zero degrees Fahrenheit for most of the month. Lake Ontario was reportedly completely frozen over. Temperatures reached above freezing only on one day in Burlington, VT in February.<ref>''The American Weather Book'' – David Ludlum</ref>
'''2000'''


'''1936'''
* July 2000 was one of the coldest months on record in South America. 4 streams of cold air pushed through the continent in a matter of 2 weeks, causing extremely low temperatures in many countries. [[Asunción]] registered -1&nbsp;°C (31&nbsp;°F), [[Buenos Aires]] (Ezeiza Airport) peaked at around -3&nbsp;°C (27&nbsp;°F), and in Brazil many cities recorded the lowest temperatures in many years. [[Curitiba]] had incredible 7 days of freezing temperatures, peaking at -4&nbsp;°C (26&nbsp;°F), and some areas of the southern states of [[Rio Grande do Sul]] and [[Santa Catarina (state)|Santa Catarina]] reached almost -10&nbsp;°C (14&nbsp;°F). It also snowed heavily in these states. The cold front even reached the Amazon, with some cities in the southern part of the forest nearing temperatures of 10&nbsp;°C (50&nbsp;°F).
* [[1936 North American cold wave]] – The cold wave of 1936 was the only cold wave of the 1930s to severely impact the United States east of the [[100th meridian west|hundredth meridian]]. One of the coldest winters in the Great Plains on record. Low temperatures dropped below {{cvt|-50|F}} in Malta, Montana on four separate days and most of Montana averaged 20 degrees below normal for the entire month of February Parshall, North Dakota hit {{cvt|-60|F}} on February 15, still a record. Langdon, North Dakota remained below {{cvt|0|F}} for 41 straight days from January 11 to February 20, the longest stretch in recorded history for the U.S. outside of Alaska. The cold wave was followed by one of the hottest summers on record, the [[1936 North American heat wave]].<ref>''Extreme Weather record book'', 2007 edition, p. 64, Christopher Burt</ref>


'''1997'''
'''1937'''
* [[1937 Western United States cold wave]] – January 1937 was the coldest month on record in the West and saw snowfall as far south as the hot desert city of [[Yuma, Arizona|Yuma]], [[Arizona]], for one of only two occasions on record. California and Nevada saw their lowest temperatures on record: {{convert|−45|F|C|1}} at [[Boca, California|Boca]] on January 20 and {{convert|−50|F|C|1}} at [[San Jacinto, Nevada|San Jacinto]] on January 8.<ref name="record">{{cite web|url=http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0113527.html|title=Record Lowest Temperatures by State|website=InfoPlease|access-date=20 January 2018}}</ref>
* 1997 Northern Plains cold air outbreak – Mid-January across the Northern U.S. was one of the windiest on record. With a low of around {{convert|-40|°F|1}} in some places, wind caused bitterly cold [[wind chill]]s sometimes nearing {{convert|-80|°F|1}}. Northern parts of [[North Dakota]] saw up to {{convert|90|in|m|2}} of snow. This was one of the most severe cold-air outbreaks of the 1990s.


'''1996'''
'''1940'''
* January 1940 Southern United States cold wave – Late January saw record-breaking cold and snow across the Southern United States. It was the coldest month there since February 1899.
* 1996 Great Midwest cold outbreak – Late January and early February was Northern [[Minnesota]]’s coldest short-term period on record. The record low of {{convert|-60|°F|1}} was recorded in [[Tower, Minnesota]]. Cities like [[Minneapolis]] experienced temperatures near {{convert|-35|°F|1}}.


'''1995'''
'''1941–1942'''
* [[Winter of 1941–42 in Eastern Europe]] – The winter of 1941–42 was the coldest of the twentieth century in most of Eastern Europe (e.g. Moscow) and was the last of a succession of abnormally cold winters there that affected the course of [[World War II]].<ref>Brönnimann, Stefan. "The global climate anomaly, 1940–1942". ''Weather'' Vol. 60, No. 12 (December 2005); pp. 336–342</ref>
* 1995 [[White Earthquake]] in southern [[Chile]] – In August 1995 southern Chile was struck by a cold wave consisting of two successive cold fronts. Fodder scarcity caused a severe livestock starvation. Cows and sheep were also buried in snow. In parts of [[Tierra del Fuego]] up to 80% of the sheep died.
* December 1995 Great Britain cold wave – On the 30th of December the United Kingdom recorded a record low of {{convert|−27.2|C|F}} in [[Altnaharra]] in [[Scotland]] equalling the record set on February 11, 1895, and January 10, 1982.


'''1994'''
'''1947'''
* [[Winter of 1946–47 in the United Kingdom]]
* [[1994 North American cold wave|1994 Northern US/Southern Canada cold outbreak]] – January 1994 was the coldest month ever recorded or since January 1977 or February 1934 over many parts of the northeast and north-central United States, plus adjacent southeastern Canada. Many overnight record lows were set. Cold outbreaks continued into February but the severity eased somewhat. [[Detroit]], Michigan saw the city's coldest temperature since 1985.
* February 1947 saw the coldest temperature on record in Canada, at -62.8&nbsp;°C at Snag, Yukon.


'''1990–1991'''
'''1949'''
* [[1949 Western North American cold wave|January 1949 Western United States cold wave]] – The winter of 1948–49 was the coldest since 1891 over the [[Western United States]] and saw record snowfall, ice storms as far south as Texas, and constant disruptions to surface transport, along with large losses in livestock and crops. Coldest winter was recorded in many places in California, Nevada, Idaho and Washington state. The cold was also accompanied by severe blizzards which isolated Wyoming ranches and paralyzed the Great Basin region. The U.S. Army ran "Operation Hay Lift" in the region to bring food and hay by plane to isolated ranches in the region. Las Vegas Nevada got a record {{cvt|16.7|in}} of snowfall during the month of January. Snow fell in both San Diego and Los Angeles on three days in January 1949. All-time record low of 0&nbsp;°F in San Antonio, Texas.<ref>Extreme Weather record book, 2007 edition, pg 65, Christopher Burt</ref>
* December 1990 western United States – Extreme cold dropped down from Canada in the second half of December, causing record low temperatures up and down the West Coast, including one of California's most damaging freezes since 1949.
* [[Winter of 1990–91 in Western Europe]] – This winter was noted for its effects especially on the [[United Kingdom]] and for two significantly heavy snowfalls which occurred in December 1990 and February 1991, such snowfalls would not be seen again until [[February 2009 Great Britain and Ireland snowfall|February 2009]]. The winter was the coldest since [[January 1987 Southeast England snowfall|January 1987]].


'''1989'''
'''1950'''
* [[1950 Northwest North American cold wave]] – January 1950 saw unprecedented cold and snowfall in the Pacific Northwest, with normally mild Seattle and [[Portland, Oregon]], both falling below {{convert|0|F|C|1}} and receiving extremely heavy snow that disrupted transport and schooling as it could not be removed easily. Western Canada saw by far its coldest month on record, leading to severe damage to fruit crops in the [[Okanagan Valley]], the freezing of Okanagan Lake for the only time since 1862, and [[Calgary]]'s only month where temperatures remained below {{convert|32|F|C}} throughout. [[Vancouver]], [[British Columbia]], had an average temperature of {{convert|-6.3|C|}},<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://climate.weather.gc.ca/climate_data/daily_data_e.html?hlyRange=1953-01-01%7C2013-06-13&dlyRange=1937-01-01%7C2013-06-12&mlyRange=1937-01-01%7C2013-06-01&StationID=889&Prov=BC&urlExtension=_e.html&searchType=stnName&optLimit=yearRange&StartYear=1840&EndYear=2018&selRowPerPage=25&Line=37&searchMethod=contains&txtStationName=vancouver&timeframe=2&Day=1&Year=1950&Month=1|title=Daily Data Report for January 1950|publisher=Environment and Climate Change Canada|language=en|access-date=2018-08-08|date=2011-10-31}}</ref> compared to the average {{convert|4.1|C|}}.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://climate.weather.gc.ca/climate_normals/results_1981_2010_e.html?stnID=889&autofwd=1|title=Canadian Climate Normals 1981–2010 Station Data|publisher=Environment and Climate Change Canada|language=en|access-date=2018-08-08|date=2011-10-31}}</ref>
* [[December 1989 United States cold wave]] – In late 1989, the central and eastern United States saw one of the coldest Decembers on record. A [[White Christmas (weather)|white Christmas]] occurred.
* February 1989 featured a significant, week-long cold wave across the Western United States. Major cities affected by the cold stretched from Seattle, WA to as far south as Los Angeles, CA. Las Vegas set a record low for February with {{convert|16|°F|1}} degrees on February 7, 1989.


'''1987'''
'''1954-1955'''
* Winter of 1954–1955 in East Asia – One of the coldest winters on record across China. Numerous major rivers and lakes froze over across southern China, including the [[Huai River]], [[Han River (Hubei)|Han River]], and [[Dongting Lake]].
* [[January 1987 Southeast England snowfall]] – This was a notably cold winter month for the [[United Kingdom]] and snowy too, especially so for the southeast with a very heavy lake-effect type snow event that affected the areas of East Anglia, south-east England and London between 11 and 14 January. It was the heaviest snowfall since 1981/82.
* Between Late July and Early August 1955 the most intense cold wave ever recorded in [[Brazil]] was registered. It snowed heavily for over 24 hours in some cities of the south of the country, accumulating over 2 feet (60&nbsp;cm) in the mountainous regions of Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina states. The cold air reached the Amazon and even crossed the Equator, which is extremely rare. Temperatures plummeted to -10&nbsp;°C (14&nbsp;°F) in [[Bom Jesus, Rio Grande do Sul]], and -2&nbsp;°C (29&nbsp;°F) in [[São Paulo]] (negative temperatures were never again recorded in the city center).
* March 1987 Greece cold wave - very rare cold air mass trapping phenomenon - The cold wave of March '87 lasted at least ten days in Athens and more in northern Greece according to weather reports and caused by a cold air mass that was trapped in the region of Greece after a high pressure system had been extended pushing trapped cold air from Russia.<ref>{{cite web |title=1987/03 |url=https://antisimvatikos.blogspot.com/1987/03/1987.html |website=antisimvatikos.blogspot |access-date=20 June 2021 |ref=1}}</ref>


'''1985–1986'''
'''1956'''
* [[1956 European cold wave]] – February 1956 was the coldest month of the twentieth century over large areas of Western Europe,<ref name="Negative"/> with mean temperatures below {{convert|0|C|F}} as far south as [[Marseilles]] being utterly unprecedented in records dating back into the eighteenth century.
* Winter of 1985/86 in the [[United Kingdom]] – The cold weather started in November 1985 with the month being considerably below average, being the coldest since at least 1925. December 1985 was a milder month and January was close to average. February was the coldest month since February 1947 in [[United Kingdom]] and it became the 5th coldest February in the [[Central England temperature|CET]] records dating back to 1659.


'''1985'''
'''1962–1963'''
* [[Winter of 1962–63 in the United Kingdom]] – The winter of 1962–63 was the coldest for 223 years [[Central England temperature|in England]], and the freeze was accompanied by strong easterly winds and the freezing of rivers and streams.
* [[1985 Arctic outbreak|January 1985 US cold air outbreak]] – On January 21, 1985, it was so cold that President [[Ronald Reagan]]'s inauguration took place in the [[Capitol Rotunda]]. In addition to the cold in Washington, D.C., Miami Beach recorded its only frost since records began, lasting for a full three hours. Several other Southern cities set all-time record cold.
* January 1963 cold wave in Mid-Western United States, as well as a brief-but-severe cold spell in the western United States.
* January 1985 – January 1985 was the coldest January since 1979 in the [[United Kingdom]] with significantly below-average temperatures.
* 1985 Great Western cold air outbreak – February 1985 saw the contiguous U.S.'s second-coldest temperature of {{convert|-69|°F|1}} in [[Peter Sinks]], [[Utah]]. About a month of severe cold affected a large part of the nation. 1985 became the fourth-coldest calendar year on record in the Pacific Northwest.{{citation needed|date=January 2019}}


'''1983'''
'''1966'''
* [[1966 Western Canadian cold wave]] – January 1966 was the coldest January on record in the Yukon and the coldest since 1950 or 1936 in the Prairie Provinces, and the severe cold continued into March, when Winnipeg recorded its most severe winter snowstorm on record.
* [[December 1983 Great Plains cold wave]] – The contiguous US had its coldest ever [[Christmas]] in 1983, except for the southwestern US. Severely cold winds blew in from Canada and about 70% of the month was colder than average. Many locations east of the Rockies broke December cold records on Christmas Eve. In addition to {{convert|-23|°F|1}} cold, the [[Sioux Falls, SD|Sioux Falls]] area had {{convert|60|mph|km/h|abbr=on}} winds bringing [[wind chill]]s down to {{convert|-70|°F|1}}. High temperatures did not even reach {{convert|-10|°F|1}} in northern Illinois during the days before Christmas.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.crh.noaa.gov/lot/?n=Dec_wx_trivia |title=December Weather Trivia |publisher=Crh.noaa.gov |access-date=2014-01-08}}</ref> Temperatures dropped below {{convert|0|°F|1}} on December 15 and remained there for over nine days at Sioux Falls.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.crh.noaa.gov/fsd/?n=joe_december1983 |title=Record cold December |publisher=Crh.noaa.gov |date=2011-07-15 |access-date=2014-01-08}}</ref> Minneapolis recorded an average temperature for the month of {{convert|3.7|°F|1}}, the coldest on record.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://climate.umn.edu/doc/twin_cities/mx12.htm |title=Minneapolis December weather records |publisher=Climate.umn.edu |access-date=2014-01-08 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121118023738/http://climate.umn.edu/doc/twin_cities/mx12.htm |archive-date=2012-11-18 }}</ref> In [[Chicago]], a temperature of {{convert|-23|°F|1}} and 30&nbsp;mph winds resulted in a wind chill of {{convert|-82|°F|1}} ({{convert|-57|°F|1}} under the new formula) on Christmas Eve.


'''1981–1982'''
'''1968–1969'''
* [[Winter of 1968–69 in Central Asia]] – [[Central Asia]] and western Siberia saw by far their coldest winter on record in 1968–69,<ref name="Negative">J.-M. Hirschi, Joël and Sinha, Bablu. "Negative NAO and
* January 1982 cold air outbreak – January 1982 was very cold. The [[NFL playoffs, 1981–82|1981 AFC Championship Game]], held in Cincinnati, was nicknamed the "[[Freezer Bowl]]" due to the {{convert|-9|°F|1}} temperature at kickoff and {{convert|-59|°F|1}} wind chill. The Sunday of the following week (January 17, 1982) is also known as [[Cold Sunday]]. Chicago's Midway and O'Hare airports record their all-time low temperatures of {{cvt|-26|F}}. Milwaukee, Wisconsin recorded temperatures of {{cvt|-26|F}} on January 17, the lowest in 111 years there. Recorded temperature of {{cvt|-5|F}} in Atlanta and Jackson, Mississippi.<ref name="weather.com">{{cite web|url=https://weather.com/storms/winter/news/america-coldest-outbreaks|title=America's Coldest Outbreaks|access-date=20 January 2018}}</ref>
cold Eurasian winters: How exceptional was the winter of 1962/1963?" ''[[Weather (journal)|Weather]]'' Vol. 62, No. 2 (February 2007); pp. 43–48</ref><ref>Rogers, Jeffrey A. and Mosley-Thompson, Ellen. [http://research.bpcrc.osu.edu/Icecore/publications/Rogers_Mosley-Thompson_Geophys_Res_Letters_1995.pdf "Atlantic Arctic Cyclones and the Mild Siberian Winters of the 1980s"]. ''[[Geophysical Research Letters]]'', vol. 22 (1995), issue 7; pp. 799–802</ref> and in Central Asia also their wettest, producing record low temperature, severe blizzards and avalanches, numerous plant deaths and record spring flooding. The cold occasionally swept into [[East Asia]], resulting in record snowstorms and cold in China and Japan.
* Winter of 1981/82 in the [[United Kingdom]] – This was a significantly colder than average winter. December started off very mild with temperatures up to {{cvt|15|C}}, but it quickly became very cold and snowy. The night of the 12th–13th is particularly noted for its cold temperatures with many records broken. January 1982 was also a cold and snowy month with records being broken on the 10th in both [[England]] and [[Scotland]]. England recorded a record low of {{cvt|−26.1|C}} and down to {{cvt|−27.2|C}} in [[Braemar]].
* 1969 Northwest North American cold wave – December 1968 and January 1969 saw record cold and snow in the [[Pacific Northwest]] and Southern BC. [[Vancouver, BC]] recorded its coldest temperature on record of {{convert|-23.3|C|F}} on January 23, 1969, and {{convert|-18.3|C|F}} at the airport on December 29, 1968. [[Seattle]] recorded its snowiest winter on record with {{convert|67.5|in|cm}} for the season at [[Sea-Tac Airport]].


'''1979'''
'''1975'''
* July 1975 was a historic month in South America. One of the most intense cold waves of the century climbed through the continent, even crossing the Equator in the Amazon Forest. On July 16, snow fell heavily in Argentina, and on the following day in Paraguay and Southern Brazil. In [[Curitiba]] it snowed for around 6 hours, accumulating on the ground, even in the city center. The phenomenon was registered in 5 states, a very rare occurrence. In July 18, the temperature dropped even more. In the state of [[Paraná (state)|Paraná]], the coffee crops were killed by an episode of black frost (it occurs when the plants' tissues freeze and die), and some cities recorded -10&nbsp;°C (14&nbsp;°F), among the lowest temperatures ever recorded in the country. The cold wave reached as far as 10°N before dissipating.<ref>{{Cite journal|title=a Southern Hemisphere cold front passage at the equator|first=Frances C.|last=Parmenter|date=1 December 1976|journal=Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society|volume=57|issue=12|pages=1435–1440|doi=10.1175/1520-0477(1976)057<1435:ASHCFP>2.0.CO;2|doi-access=free|bibcode=1976BAMS...57.1435P }}</ref>
* Cold wave of 1979 – widespread cold across the country. One of the largest Chicago snowstorms in history at the time, with 21 inches of snowfall in the two-day period, the [[1979 Chicago blizzard|1979 Chicago Blizzard]] occurred during the cold wave in January.

'''1977'''
*[[Cold wave of January 1977]]. Greatest eastern US cold wave of the 20th century. The core of the cold air extended from New Hampshire to Florida and west to Iowa and Missouri. Ohio was at the very center of the cold air mass where every weather station there recorded its coldest month on record. Cincinnati recorded its lowest known temperature of {{cvt|-25|F}} dating back to 1820. The South Carolina state record temperature of {{cvt|-20|F}} was recorded during this cold wave near Long Creek. The wind chill in Minneapolis was {{cvt|-78|F}} on January 28, possibility the lowest ever recorded there up until that point. Snow fell in Miami and Homestead Florida, the farthest south snow was ever recorded in America. President Jimmy Carter walked in his inauguration parade in temperatures below freezing on January 20. Buffalo, New York was hit with its worst blizzard ever during the last week of January where near hurricane-force winds created whiteout conditions for three days. Temperatures in Buffalo were around {{cvt|0|F}}, wind chills recorded of {{cvt|-60|F}}using the old formula, and the blizzard paralyzed the city with snow drifts of up to {{convert|30|ft}}.<ref>Extreme Weather record book, 2007 edition, pg 66, Christopher Burt</ref>


'''1978'''
'''1978'''
* [[Cold wave of 1978|Cold wave of early 1978]] – Produced one of the coldest winters on record in all states east of the Rockies, except Maine.
* [[Cold wave of 1978|Cold wave of early 1978]] – Produced one of the coldest winters on record in all states east of the Rockies, except Maine.
* Europe and Asia, winter of 1978–1979, caused by the Kara Sea 1978 anticyclone. Weather conditions typical for polar regions were detected in Moscow, Leningrad (St. Petersburg), and Sverdlovsk (Yekaterinburg), affecting logistics and the energy industry, and causing fires at the Beloyarskaya Nuclear powerplant.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.oblgazeta.ru/politics/28525/ | title=Трагедию предотвратили пожарные: Политика: Облгазета }}</ref> Freeze, but a lack of snow caused [[winter cereal]] crop failure throughout 1979.


'''1977'''
'''1979'''
* Cold wave of 1979 – widespread cold across the United States. One of the largest Chicago snowstorms in history at the time, with 21 inches of snowfall in the two-day period, the [[1979 Chicago blizzard|1979 Chicago Blizzard]] occurred during the cold wave in January.
*[[Cold wave of January 1977]]. Greatest eastern US cold wave of the 20th century. The core of the cold air extended from New Hampshire to Florida and west to Iowa and Missouri. Ohio was at the very center of the cold air mass where every weather station there recorded its coldest month on record. Cincinnati recorded its lowest known temperature of {{cvt|-25|F}} dating back to 1820. The South Carolina state record temperature of {{cvt|-20|F}} was recorded during this cold wave near Long Creek. The wind chill in Minneapolis was {{cvt|-78|F}} on January 28, possibility the lowest ever recorded there up until that point. Snow fell in Miami and Homestead Florida, the farthest south snow was ever recorded in America. President Jimmy Carter walked in his inauguration parade in temperatures below freezing on January 20. Buffalo, New York was hit with its worst blizzard ever during the last week of January where near hurricane-force winds created whiteout conditions for three days. Temperatures in Buffalo were around {{cvt|0|F}}, wind chills recorded of {{cvt|-60|F}}, and the blizzard paralyzed the city with snow drifts of up to {{convert|30|ft}}.<ref>Extreme Weather record book, 2007 edition, pg 66, Christopher Burt</ref>

'''1977–1979 winters'''
* Late 1970s (1977, 1978, 1979) – In the last three years of the 1970s, almost all of the conterminous United States had at least one winter with a memorable cold wave, and the winter of 1978–79 was the coldest on record in the lower 48{{citation needed|date=January 2019}}, with everywhere, except normally frigid upstate Maine, experiencing well below average temperatures.
* Late 1970s (1977, 1978, 1979) – In the last three years of the 1970s, almost all of the conterminous United States had at least one winter with a memorable cold wave, and the winter of 1978–79 was the coldest on record in the lower 48{{citation needed|date=January 2019}}, with everywhere, except normally frigid upstate Maine, experiencing well below average temperatures.


'''1975'''
'''1981–1982'''
* Winter of 1981/82 in the [[United Kingdom]] – This was a significantly colder than average winter. December started off very mild with temperatures up to {{cvt|15|C}}, but it quickly became very cold and snowy. The night of the 12th–13th is particularly noted for its cold temperatures with many records broken. January 1982 was also a cold and snowy month with records being broken on the 10th in both [[England]] and [[Scotland]]. England recorded a record low of {{cvt|−26.1|C}} and down to {{cvt|−27.2|C}} in [[Braemar]].
* July 1975 was a historic month in South America. One of the most intense cold waves of the century climbed through the continent, even crossing the Equator in the Amazon Forest. On July 16, snow fell heavily in Argentina, and on the following day in Paraguay and Southern Brazil. In [[Curitiba]] it snowed for around 3 hours, accumulating on the ground, even in the city center. The phenomenon was registered in 5 states, a very rare occurrence. In July 18, the temperature dropped even more. In the state of [[Paraná (state)|Paraná]], the coffee crops were killed by an episode of black frost (it occurs when the plants' tissues freeze and die), and some cities recorded -10&nbsp;°C (14&nbsp;°F), among the lowest temperatures ever recorded in the country. The cold wave reached as far as 10°N before dissipating.<https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/bams/57/12/1520-0477_1976_057_1435_ashcfp_2_0_co_2.xml>
* January 1982 cold air outbreak – January 1982 was very cold. The [[NFL playoffs, 1981–82|1981 AFC Championship Game]], held in Cincinnati, was nicknamed the "[[Freezer Bowl]]" due to the {{convert|-9|°F|1}} temperature at kickoff and {{convert|-59|°F|1}} wind chill. The Sunday of the following week (January 17, 1982) is also known as [[Cold Sunday]]. Chicago's Midway and O'Hare airports record their all-time low temperatures of {{cvt|-26|F}}. Milwaukee, Wisconsin recorded temperatures of {{cvt|-26|F}} on January 17, the lowest in 111 years there. Recorded temperature of {{cvt|-5|F}} in Atlanta and Jackson, Mississippi.<ref name="weather.com">{{cite web|url=https://weather.com/storms/winter/news/america-coldest-outbreaks|title=America's Coldest Outbreaks|access-date=20 January 2018|archive-date=20 January 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180120081455/https://weather.com/storms/winter/news/america-coldest-outbreaks|url-status=dead}}</ref>


'''1968–1969'''
'''1983'''
* [[December 1983 Great Plains cold wave]] – The contiguous US had its coldest ever [[Christmas]] in 1983, except for the southwestern US. Severely cold winds blew in from Canada and about 70% of the month was colder than average. Many locations east of the Rockies broke December cold records on Christmas Eve. In addition to {{convert|-23|°F|1}} cold, the [[Sioux Falls, SD|Sioux Falls]] area had {{convert|60|mph|km/h|abbr=on}} winds bringing [[wind chill]]s down to {{convert|-70|°F|1}}. High temperatures did not even reach {{convert|-10|°F|1}} in northern Illinois during the days before Christmas.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.crh.noaa.gov/lot/?n=Dec_wx_trivia |title=December Weather Trivia |publisher=Crh.noaa.gov |access-date=2014-01-08}}</ref> Temperatures dropped below {{convert|0|°F|1}} on December 15 and remained there for over nine days at Sioux Falls.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.crh.noaa.gov/fsd/?n=joe_december1983 |title=Record cold December |publisher=Crh.noaa.gov |date=2011-07-15 |access-date=2014-01-08}}</ref> Minneapolis recorded an average temperature for the month of {{convert|3.7|°F|1}}, the coldest on record.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://climate.umn.edu/doc/twin_cities/mx12.htm |title=Minneapolis December weather records |publisher=Climate.umn.edu |access-date=2014-01-08 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121118023738/http://climate.umn.edu/doc/twin_cities/mx12.htm |archive-date=2012-11-18 }}</ref> In [[Chicago]], a temperature of {{convert|-23|°F|1}} and 30&nbsp;mph winds resulted in a wind chill of {{convert|-82|°F|1}} ({{convert|-57|°F|1}} under the new formula) on Christmas Eve.
* [[Winter of 1968–69 in Central Asia]] – [[Central Asia]] and western Siberia saw by far their coldest winter on record in 1968–69,<ref name="Negative">J.-M. Hirschi, Joël and Sinha, Bablu. "Negative NAO and
cold Eurasian winters: How exceptional was the winter of 1962/1963?" ''[[Weather (journal)|Weather]]'' Vol. 62, No. 2 (February 2007); pp. 43–48</ref><ref>Rogers, Jeffrey A. and Mosley-Thompson, Ellen. [http://research.bpcrc.osu.edu/Icecore/publications/Rogers_Mosley-Thompson_Geophys_Res_Letters_1995.pdf "Atlantic Arctic Cyclones and the Mild Siberian Winters of the 1980s"]. ''[[Geophysical Research Letters]]'', vol. 22 (1995), issue 7; pp. 799–802</ref> and in Central Asia also their wettest, producing record low temperature, severe blizzards and avalanches, numerous plant deaths and record spring flooding. The cold occasionally swept into [[East Asia]], resulting in record snowstorms and cold in China and Japan.
* 1969 Northwest North American cold wave – December 1968 and January 1969 saw record cold and snow in the [[Pacific Northwest]] and Southern BC. [[Vancouver, BC]] recorded its coldest temperature on record of {{convert|-23.3|C|F}} on January 23, 1969, and {{convert|-18.3|C|F}} at the airport on December 29, 1968. [[Seattle]] recorded its snowiest winter on record with {{convert|67.5|in|cm}} for the season at [[Sea-Tac Airport]].


'''1966'''
'''1985–1986'''
* 1985 Great Western cold air outbreak – February 1985 saw the contiguous U.S.'s second-coldest temperature of {{convert|-69|°F|1}} in [[Peter Sinks]], [[Utah]]. About a month of severe cold affected a large part of the nation. 1985 became the fourth-coldest calendar year on record in the Pacific Northwest.{{citation needed|date=January 2019}}
* [[1966 Western Canadian cold wave]] – January 1966 was the coldest January on record in the Yukon and the coldest since 1950 or 1936 in the Prairie Provinces, and the severe cold continued into March, when Winnipeg recorded its most severe winter snowstorm on record.
* January 1985 – January 1985 was the coldest January since 1979 in the [[United Kingdom]] with significantly below-average temperatures.
* [[1985 Arctic outbreak|January 1985 US cold air outbreak]] – On January 21, 1985, it was so cold that President [[Ronald Reagan]]'s inauguration took place in the [[Capitol Rotunda]]. In addition to the cold in Washington, D.C., Miami Beach recorded its only frost since records began, lasting for a full three hours. Several other Southern cities set all-time record cold.
* Winter of 1985/86 in the [[United Kingdom]] – The cold weather started in November 1985 with the month being considerably below average, being the coldest since at least 1925. December 1985 was a milder month and January was close to average. February was the coldest month since February 1947 in [[United Kingdom]] and it became the 5th coldest February in the [[Central England temperature|CET]] records dating back to 1659.
*July 1986 – A polar blast in southeastern Australia brought sea level snow to the cities of [[Melbourne]], [[Launceston, Tasmania|Launceston]] and [[Hobart]], with [[Rain and snow mixed|melting snow flurries]] even reported in parts of [[Sydney]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.aer.gov.au/system/files/Attachment%203%20-%20Bureau%20of%20Meteorology%20-%20A%20history%20of%20stormy%20weather.pdf|title=Ausgrid's pass through application Bureau of Meteorology: A history of stormy weather|date=August 2015|work=AAP|access-date= 15 June 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bom.gov.au/lam/climate/levelthree/c20thc/temp4.html |archive-url=https://webarchive.nla.gov.au/awa/20090317054300/http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/96122/20090317-1643/www.bom.gov.au/lam/climate/levelthree/c20thc/temp4.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=17 March 2009 |title=BOM – Australian Climate Extremes |website=webarchive.nla.gov.au}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref>


'''1962–1963'''
'''1987'''
* [[January 1987 Southeast England snowfall]] – This was a notably cold winter month for the [[United Kingdom]] and snowy too, especially so for the southeast with a very heavy lake-effect type snow event that affected the areas of East Anglia, south-east England and London between 11 and 14 January. It was the heaviest snowfall since 1981/82.
* January 1963 cold wave in Mid-Western United States, as well as a brief-but-severe cold spell in the western United States.
* March 1987 Greece cold wave - very rare cold air mass trapping phenomenon - The cold wave of March '87 lasted at least ten days in Athens and more in northern Greece according to weather reports and caused by a cold air mass that was trapped in the region of Greece after a high pressure system had been extended pushing trapped cold air from Russia.<ref>{{cite web |title=1987/03 |url=https://antisimvatikos.blogspot.com/1987/03/1987.html |website=antisimvatikos.blogspot |date=15 March 1987 |access-date=20 June 2021 |ref=1}}</ref>
* [[Winter of 1962–63 in the United Kingdom]] – The winter of 1962–63 was the coldest for 223 years [[Central England temperature|in England]], and the freeze was accompanied by strong easterly winds and the freezing of rivers and streams.


'''1956'''
'''1989'''
* February 1989 featured a significant, week-long cold wave across the Western United States. Major cities affected by the cold stretched from Seattle, WA to as far south as Los Angeles, CA. Las Vegas set a record low for February with {{convert|16|°F|1}} degrees on February 7, 1989.
* [[1956 European cold wave]] – February 1956 was the coldest month of the twentieth century over large areas of Western Europe,<ref name="Negative"/> with mean temperatures below {{convert|0|C|F}} as far south as [[Marseilles]] being utterly unprecedented in records dating back into the eighteenth century.
* [[December 1989 United States cold wave]] – In late 1989, the central and eastern United States saw one of the coldest Decembers on record. A [[White Christmas (weather)|white Christmas]] occurred.


'''1954-1955'''
'''1990–1991'''
* [[Winter of 1990–91 in Western Europe]] – This winter was noted for its effects especially on the [[United Kingdom]] and for two significantly heavy snowfalls which occurred in December 1990 and February 1991, such snowfalls would not be seen again until [[February 2009 Great Britain and Ireland snowfall|February 2009]]. The winter was the coldest since [[January 1987 Southeast England snowfall|January 1987]].
* Winter of 1954–1955 in East Asia – One of the coldest winters on record across China. Numerous major rivers and lakes froze over across southern China, including the [[Huai River]], [[Han River (Hubei)|Han River]], and [[Dongting Lake]].
* December 1990 western United States – Extreme cold dropped down from Canada in the second half of December, causing record low temperatures up and down the West Coast, including one of California's most damaging freezes since 1949.


'''1955'''
'''1994'''
* [[1994 North American cold wave|1994 Northern US/Southern Canada cold outbreak]] – January 1994 was the coldest month ever recorded or since January 1977 or February 1934 over many parts of the northeast and north-central United States, plus adjacent southeastern Canada. Many overnight record lows were set. Cold outbreaks continued into February but the severity eased somewhat. [[Detroit]], Michigan saw the city's coldest temperature since 1985.
* Between Late July and Early August 1955 the most intense cold wave ever recorded in [[Brazil]] was registered. It snowed heavily for over 24 hours in some cities of the south of the country, accumulating over 2 feet (60&nbsp;cm) in the mountainous regions of Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina states. The cold air reached the Amazon and even crossed the Equator, which is extremely rare. Temperatures plummeted to -10&nbsp;°C (14&nbsp;°F) in [[Bom Jesus, Rio Grande do Sul]], and -2&nbsp;°C (29&nbsp;°F) in [[São Paulo]] (negative temperatures were never again recorded in the city).


'''1950'''
'''1995'''
* 1995 [[White Earthquake]] in southern [[Chile]] – In August 1995 southern Chile was struck by a cold wave consisting of two successive cold fronts. Fodder scarcity caused a severe livestock starvation. Cows and sheep were also buried in snow. In parts of [[Tierra del Fuego]] up to 80% of the sheep died.
* [[1950 Northwest North American cold wave]] – January 1950 saw unprecedented cold and snowfall in the Pacific Northwest, with normally mild Seattle and [[Portland, Oregon]] both falling below {{convert|0|F|C|1}} and receiving extremely heavy snow that disrupted transport and schooling as it could not be removed easily. Western Canada saw by far its coldest month on record, leading to severe damage to fruit crops in the [[Okanagan Valley]], the freezing of Okanagan Lake for the only time since 1862, and [[Calgary]]'s only month where temperatures remained below {{convert|32|F|C}} throughout. [[Vancouver]], [[British Columbia]] had an average temperature of {{convert|-6.3|C|}},<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://climate.weather.gc.ca/climate_data/daily_data_e.html?hlyRange=1953-01-01%7C2013-06-13&dlyRange=1937-01-01%7C2013-06-12&mlyRange=1937-01-01%7C2013-06-01&StationID=889&Prov=BC&urlExtension=_e.html&searchType=stnName&optLimit=yearRange&StartYear=1840&EndYear=2018&selRowPerPage=25&Line=37&searchMethod=contains&txtStationName=vancouver&timeframe=2&Day=1&Year=1950&Month=1|title=Daily Data Report for January 1950|publisher=Environment and Climate Change Canada|language=en|access-date=2018-08-08|date=2011-10-31}}</ref> compared to the average {{convert|4.1|C|}}.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://climate.weather.gc.ca/climate_normals/results_1981_2010_e.html?stnID=889&autofwd=1|title=Canadian Climate Normals 1981–2010 Station Data|publisher=Environment and Climate Change Canada|language=en|access-date=2018-08-08|date=2011-10-31}}</ref>
* December 1995 Great Britain cold wave – On the 30th of December the United Kingdom recorded a record low of {{convert|−27.2|C|F}} in [[Altnaharra]] in [[Scotland]] equalling the record set on February 11, 1895, and January 10, 1982.


'''1949'''
'''1996'''
* 1996 Great Midwest cold outbreak – Late January and early February was Northern [[Minnesota]]'s coldest short-term period on record. The record low of {{convert|-60|°F|1}} was recorded in [[Tower, Minnesota]]. Cities like [[Minneapolis]] experienced temperatures near {{convert|-35|°F|1}}.
* [[1949 Western North American cold wave|January 1949 Western United States cold wave]] – The winter of 1948–49 was the coldest since 1891 over the [[Western United States]] and saw record snowfall, ice storms as far south as Texas, and constant disruptions to surface transport, along with large losses in livestock and crops. Coldest winter was recorded in many places in California, Nevada, Idaho and Washington state. The cold was also accompanied by severe blizzards which isolated Wyoming ranches and paralyzed the Great Basin region. The U.S. Army ran "Operation Hay Lift" in the region to bring food and hay by plane to isolated ranches in the region. Las Vegas Nevada got a record {{cvt|16.7|in}} of snowfall during the month of January. Snow fell in both San Diego and Los Angeles on three days in January 1949. All-time record low of 0&nbsp;°F in San Antonio, Texas.<ref>Extreme Weather record book, 2007 edition, pg 65, Christopher Burt</ref>


'''1947'''
'''1997'''
* 1997 Northern Plains cold air outbreak – Mid-January across the Northern U.S. was one of the windiest on record. With a low of around {{convert|-40|°F|1}} in some places, wind caused bitterly cold [[wind chill]]s sometimes nearing {{convert|-80|°F|1}}. Northern parts of [[North Dakota]] saw up to {{convert|90|in|m|2}} of snow. This was one of the most severe cold-air outbreaks of the 1990s.
* [[Winter of 1946–47 in the United Kingdom]]
* February 1947 saw the coldest temperature on record in Canada, at -62.8&nbsp;°C at Snag, Yukon.


'''1941–1942'''
'''2000'''
* July 2000 was one of the coldest months on record in South America. 4 streams of cold air pushed through the continent in a matter of 2 weeks, causing extremely low temperatures in many countries. [[Asunción]] registered -1&nbsp;°C (31&nbsp;°F), [[Buenos Aires]] (Ezeiza Airport) peaked at around -3&nbsp;°C (27&nbsp;°F), and in Brazil many cities recorded the lowest temperatures in many years. [[Curitiba]] had incredible 12 days of freezing temperatures, peaking at -4&nbsp;°C (26&nbsp;°F), and some areas of the southern states of [[Rio Grande do Sul]] and [[Santa Catarina (state)|Santa Catarina]] reached -11&nbsp;°C (14&nbsp;°F). It also snowed heavily in these states. The cold front even reached the Amazon, with some cities in the southern part of the forest nearing temperatures of 10&nbsp;°C (50&nbsp;°F).
* [[Winter of 1941–42 in Eastern Europe]] – The winter of 1941–42 was the coldest of the twentieth century in most of Eastern Europe (e.g. Moscow) and was the last of a succession of abnormally cold winters there that affected the course of [[World War II]].<ref>Brönnimann, Stefan. "The global climate anomaly, 1940–1942". ''Weather'' Vol. 60, No. 12 (December 2005); pp. 336–342</ref>


===21st-century cold waves (2001–present)===
'''1940'''
* January 1940 Southern United States cold wave – Late January saw record-breaking cold and snow across the Southern United States. It was the coldest month there since February 1899.


'''1937'''
'''2002'''
* 2002 Cold wave in Greece January 4 - the first significant snowfall of 21st century in Athens, Greece occurred on January 4, lasted three days and caused major disruption to the city. The dense snowfall during midnight of January 5 left at least 15&nbsp;cm of snow on the ground in downtown Athens, the northern suburbs of Athens received more than 50&nbsp;cm.<ref>{{cite web |title=2002 cold wave |url=https://antisimvatikos.blogspot.com/2002/01/blog-post_06.html |website=antisimvatikos.blogspot |date=June 2002 |access-date=15 June 2021 |ref=1}}</ref>
* [[1937 Western United States cold wave]] – January 1937 was the coldest month on record in the West and saw snowfall as far south as the hot desert city of [[Yuma, Arizona|Yuma]], [[Arizona]] for one of only two occasions on record. California and Nevada saw their lowest temperatures on record: {{convert|−45|F|C|1}} at [[Boca, California|Boca]] on January 20 and {{convert|−50|F|C|1}} at [[San Jacinto, Nevada|San Jacinto]] on January 8.<ref name="record">{{cite web|url=http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0113527.html|title=Record Lowest Temperatures by State|website=InfoPlease|access-date=20 January 2018}}</ref>


'''1936'''
'''2004–2005'''
* 2004 January cold outbreak, Northeast United States – New England was close to a record month when frequent Arctic fronts caused unusually cold weather. [[Boston]] had its coldest January since 1893 ({{convert|19.7|F|C|disp=comma}}), when it averaged {{convert|20.7|F|C}}, and its lowest mean maximum at {{convert|27.2|F|C}}. [[Virginia Beach]] had an unusually long period of below [[freezing]] weather. Some areas of northern [[New York (state)|New York]] saw {{convert|150|in|m|2}} of snow in a month. Many parts of the western and midwestern area of the country seen the effect as well.
* [[1936 North American cold wave]] – The cold wave of 1936 was the only cold wave of the 1930s to severely impact the United States east of the [[100th meridian west|hundredth meridian]]. One of the coldest winters in the Great Plains on record. Low temperatures dropped below {{cvt|-50|F}} in Malta, Montana on four separate days and most of Montana averaged 20 degrees below normal for the entire month of February Parshall, North Dakota hit {{cvt|-60|F}} on February 15, still a record. Langdon, North Dakota remained below {{cvt|0|F}} for 41 straight days from January 11 to February 20, the longest stretch in recorded history for the U.S. outside of Alaska. The cold wave was followed by one of the hottest summers on record, the [[1936 North American heat wave]].<ref>''Extreme Weather record book'', 2007 edition, p. 64, Christopher Burt</ref>
* 2004 February cold wave in Greece on February 12 – coldest air mass to hit Greece in 21st century till today – a very cold air mass from the North Pole was pulled in eastern Europe because of a high-pressure system in west Scandinavia extended to south Europe, resulting in a low-pressure system in the Balkans. The cold snap finally moved south hitting Greece and caused ' record low temperatures, frozen rain phenomenon, thundersnow in [[Athens]], snowfall that blanketed [[Crete]] island, snow that fell even in the most southern place of Greece in [[Gavdos]] Island. During midnight of February 13 temperature in Athens dropped so fast that resulted in a frozen rain that ice- capped all trees, followed by a rare thundersnow phenomenon dropping 25&nbsp;cm of snow in central Athens and more than 50&nbsp;cm in eastern suburbs. In the morning of February 13 was recorded the lowest temperature of 21st century in the center of Athens till today of -5&nbsp;°C(23&nbsp;°F) degrees(some meteorological stations east of downtown on higher altitude recorded -7&nbsp;°C(19,4&nbsp;°F) ) resulting in water supply disruption and residents had to activate boilers and water heaters in order to make the water running again.<ref>{{cite web |title=2004/02 |url=https://antisimvatikos.blogspot.com/2004/02/blog-post.html |website=antisimvatikos.blogspot |date=14 February 2004 |access-date=20 June 2021 |ref=1}}</ref>
* 2004–2005 Southern Europe cold wave – All areas of Southern Europe saw an unusually hard winter. This cold front caused snow in [[Algeria]], which is extremely unusual. The south of Spain and Morocco also recorded freezing temperatures, and record freezing temperatures were observed in the north of Portugal and Spain.{{Citation needed|date=February 2023}}


'''1934'''
'''2005–2006'''
* [[2006 European cold wave|2005–06 European cold wave]] – Eastern Europe and Russia saw a very cold winter. Some of them saw their coldest on record or since the 1970s. Snow was in abundance in unusual places, such as in southern Spain and Northern Africa. All the winter months that season saw temperatures well below average across the continent.
* February 1934 Cold Wave in New England and Eastern Canada – Longest period of cold weather ever experienced to this point. Average temperatures in upper New England and Eastern Canada were around zero degrees Fahrenheit for most of the month. Lake Ontario was reportedly completely frozen over. Temperatures reached above freezing only on one day in Burlington, VT in February.<ref>''The American Weather Book'' – David Ludlum</ref>


'''1933'''
'''2007'''
* 2007 Northern Hemisphere cold wave – All of Canada and most of the United States underwent a freeze after a two-week warming that took place in late March and early April. Crops froze, wind picked up, and snow drizzled much of the United States. Some parts of Europe also experienced unusual cold winter-like temperatures, during that time.
* [[1933 Western United States cold wave]] – The winter of 1932–33 was the second- or third-coldest on record<ref name="1976-77">Diaz, Henry F. and Quayle, Robert G. [http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/pdf/10.1175/1520-0493%281978%29106%3C1393%3ATWITCU%3E2.0.CO%3B2 "The 1976–77 Winter in the Contiguous United States in Comparison with Past Records"]. ''[[Monthly Weather Review]]'', 106 (1977), no. 10, pp. 1392–1422</ref> in most of the West (the coldest on record in Arizona<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/cag/time-series/us/02/00/tavg/3/02/1896-2015?base_prd=true&firstbaseyear=1896&lastbaseyear=1976&trend=true&trend_base=10&firsttrendyear=1976&lasttrendyear=2015&filter=true&filterType=binomial|title=Climate at a Glance|publisher= National Centers for Environmental Information|access-date=20 January 2018}}</ref>) and saw record cold temperatures in Seneca, Oregon (-54&nbsp;°F/-48&nbsp;°C), Moran, Wyoming (-66&nbsp;°F/-54&nbsp;°C) and Seminole, Texas (-23&nbsp;°F/-31&nbsp;°F) between February 7 and 10,<ref name="record"/> when sixty deaths were blamed on extreme cold and ice storms.
* [[July 2007 Argentine winter storm]] – An interaction with an area of low pressure systems across [[Argentina]] during July 6, 7 and 8 of 2007, and the entry of a massive polar [[July 2007 Argentine winter storm|cold snap]] resulted in severe [[snowfall]]s and [[blizzard]]s, and recorded temperatures below {{convert|−32|°C}}. The cold snap advanced from the south towards the central zone of the country, continuing its displacement towards the north during Saturday, July 7. On Monday, July 9, the simultaneous presence of very cold air, gave place to the occurrence of snowfalls. This phenomenon left at least 23&nbsp;people dead.<ref>Cormier, Bill, [https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/09/AR2007070901559.html Buenos Aires Gets First Snow Since 1918], [[Associated Press]] (July 7, 2007).</ref><ref>[http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/06/01/business/LA-FIN-Argentina-Energy-Woes.php Cold snap in Argentina leads to energy crunch that idles factories, triggers blackouts], AP via ''[[International Herald Tribune]]'', May 31, 2007 {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080531083110/http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/06/01/business/LA-FIN-Argentina-Energy-Woes.php |date=May 31, 2008 }}</ref>


'''1932'''
'''2008'''
* 2008 Alaska cold wave – In early February, Alaska experienced the coldest temperatures for eight years, with [[Fairbanks]] nearing {{convert|-50|°F|°C|1}} and [[Chicken, Alaska]], bottoming out at {{convert|-72|°F|°C|1}}, a mere {{convert|8|F-change|1|spell=in}} away from the record of {{convert|-80|°F|°C|1}}. The first half of January also brought unusual cold weather and heavy snow to widespread regions of China and the [[Middle East]], snowfall was present in [[Baghdad]] for the first time since the 1910s.<ref name= baghdadsnowfall/>
* Major cold outbreaks affected California in January, February and December. Up to two inches of snow fell across the Los Angeles Basin on January 15, and two inches of snow was officially recorded at the Downtown Los Angeles Weather Bureau Office.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.weather.gov/media/sgx/Dayinhistory/dayhistory0115.pdf|title=This day in history, January 15}}</ref> Snow also fell in San Francisco on three days in December 1932.
* 2008 Greece cold wave February 16 - most significant cold wave that lasted three days after 2002 - On February 14 a massive high pressure system between Greenland and Scandinavia extended from Arctic Ocean to west Mediterranean accompanied by a massive low pressure system in Siberia resulting in a cold air mass in eastern Europe reaching Greece on February 16. The cold air that moved over Aegean sea caused lake-effect snow dropping more than 40&nbsp;cm of snow in Athens in the Chaidari district. In addition, it caused major disruption to the city and numerous flights were cancelled due to bad weather conditions.<ref>{{cite web |title=2008/02 |url=https://antisimvatikos.blogspot.com/2008/02/2008.html |website=antisimvatikos.blogspot |date=18 February 2008 |access-date=20 June 2021 |ref=1}}</ref>


'''1930'''
'''2009–2010'''
* Early 2009 European Cold Wave – Early January gave most of Europe, especially in central and south very cold temperatures. Some places like Germany, France, Italy, [[Romania]] and Spain had record cold temperatures well below {{convert|0|°C}}. Most of the places were covered in snow and ice which caused school closings and airport delays. Large cities like [[Paris]], [[Madrid]], [[Berlin]] and even [[Marseille]] saw very cold temperatures with much snow and ice in [[Northern Italy]], most of Germany, in northern [[Portugal]] and even along the coasts of the [[Mediterranean]]. In early February another cold front brought heavy snowfall to much of Western Europe with the heaviest snow falling in France, Northern Italy, the Low Countries and the United Kingdom, where parts of [[Southern England]] had seen the worst snowfall in over eighteen years causing widespread travel disruption particularly around [[London]].
* A cold wave gripped the western United States in January 1930. Two inches of snow fell in Palm Springs, CA on January 11, one of only two times in the city's history that snow was ever observed.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.weather.gov/media/sgx/Dayinhistory/dayhistory0111.pdf|title=This day in history, January 11}}</ref>
* [[February 2009 Great Britain and Ireland snowfall]] – The '''February 2009 Great Britain and Ireland snowfall''' was a prolonged period of [[Winter storm#Snow|snowfall]] that began on 1 February 2009. Some areas experienced their [[Winter of 1990–1991 in Western Europe|largest snowfall levels in 18 years]].<ref name="http1">{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7864395.stm |title=UK &#124; Heavy snow hits much of Britain |work=BBC News |date=2 February 2009 |access-date=6 February 2009}}</ref> Snow fell over much of Western Europe.<ref name="Blanket of snow over much of Europe">{{cite web|url=http://www.rte.ie/news/2009/0202/europeweather.html|title=Blanket of snow over much of Europe|date=2 February 2009|access-date=6 February 2009|publisher=[[RTÉ]]}}</ref> The [[United Kingdom]]'s [[Met Office]] and [[Republic of Ireland|Ireland's]] [[Met Éireann]] issued severe weather warnings in anticipation of the snowfall. More than {{convert|30|cm|0}} of snow fell on parts of the [[North Downs]] and over {{convert|20|cm|0}} in parts of the London area.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2009/feb/02/snow-london-travel-chaos |title=Heavy snow to cause travel chaos all week &#124; UK news &#124; guardian.co.uk |publisher=Guardian |date= 2 February 2009|access-date=6 February 2009 | location=London | first=Audrey | last=Gillan}}</ref> Such snow accumulation is uncommon in London.<ref name="msnbc1">{{cite web|url=https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna28972533 |title=Snow causes London to slow to crawl|work=NBC News |date=2 February 2009 |access-date=6 February 2009}}</ref> On the morning of 6 February the majority of Great Britain and Ireland had snow cover, with the area surrounding the [[Bristol Channel]] ([[South Wales]] ([[Cardiff]] area) and [[South West England]] ([[Bristol]] area)) being most affected – {{convert|55|cm}} had settled overnight around [[Okehampton]], [[Devon]], [[South West England]] with similar depths in South Wales. In Ireland the highest totals were recorded around East Kildare and [[County Wicklow|Wicklow County]]'s were up to {{convert|11|in|cm}} fell around [[Naas]], [[County Kildare]] and even more along the [[Wicklow Mountains]]. The last time such widespread snowfall affected Britain was in February 1991.<ref>{{cite news|author1=Richard Allen Greene|author2=Olivia Feld|url=http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/europe/02/02/europe.snow/index.html |title=Heaviest UK snow in 18 years hits international flights |publisher=CNN|date= 7 February 2009|access-date=6 February 2009}}</ref> On the 2nd a total of {{convert|32|cm|0}} had fallen in [[Leatherhead]], [[Surrey]] just south of the [[M25 motorway|M25]]. Also {{convert|30|cm|0}} had fallen over the [[South Downs]] and {{convert|26|cm|0}} in higher areas of [[Brighton]].
* [[December 2009 European snowfall|2009–10 European cold wave]] – At least ninety were confirmed dead after record low temperatures and heavy snowfall across Europe causes travel disruption to much of the continent including the [[British Isles]], France, the [[Low Countries]], Germany, Austria, Italy, [[Poland]], the [[Baltic States]], the [[Balkans]], [[Ukraine]] and Russia. It was the coldest winter and longest cold spell for thirty years in the United Kingdom, whilst temperatures in the Italian [[Alps|Alpine]] peaks reached low to an extreme of {{convert|-47|°C|1}}.
{{anchor |Early 2009 European Cold Wave}}
* The first snowfall began on 17 December 2009, before a respite over the Christmas period.<ref name="summary">{{Cite news |title=Snow and low temperatures – December 2009 to January 2010 |url=http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/interesting/jan2010/ |work=www.metoffice.gov.uk |access-date=9 September 2011}}</ref> The most severe snowy weather began on 5 January in [[North West England]] and west Scotland with temperatures hitting a low of {{convert|-17.6|°C|1}} in [[Greater Manchester]], England.<ref>{{Cite news |title=Minus 17.6C – Big freeze sets new record |url=http://menmedia.co.uk/manchestereveningnews/news/s/1188272_minus_176c__big_freeze_sets_new_record |newspaper=Manchester Evening News |date=7 January 2010 |access-date=9 September 2011 |archive-date=12 November 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121112204427/http://menmedia.co.uk/manchestereveningnews/news/s/1188272_minus_176c__big_freeze_sets_new_record |url-status=dead }}</ref> The snow spread to Southern England on 6 January and by 7 January the United Kingdom was blanketed in snow,<ref name="summary" /> which was captured by [[NASA]]'s [[Terra (satellite)|Terra satellite]].<ref>{{Cite news |title=Frozen Britain seen from above |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8447023.stm |work=BBC News |date=7 January 2010 |access-date=5 December 2011}}</ref> The thaw came a week later, as temperatures started to increase.<ref name="summary" /> The winter weather brought widespread transport disruption, school closures, power failures, the postponement of sporting events and 25&nbsp;deaths. A low of {{convert|-22.3|°C|1}} was recorded in [[Altnaharra]], [[Scotland]] on 8 January 2010. Overall it was the coldest winter since 1978–79, with a mean temperature of {{convert|1.5|°C|1}}.
* [[Winter of 2009–10 in Great Britain and Ireland]] – The '''winter of 2009–10 in the United Kingdom''' (also called '''''The Big Freeze''''' by [[British media]]) was a meteorological event that started on 16 December 2009, as part of the [[Winter of 2009–10 in Europe|severe winter weather in Europe]]. January 2010 was provisionally the coldest January since 1987 across the country.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/2010/january.html|title=January 2010|publisher=The [[Met Office]]|access-date=20 February 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120117191208/http://www.metoffice.gov.uk/climate/uk/2010/january.html|archive-date=17 January 2012}}</ref> A persistent pattern of cold northerly and easterly winds brought cold, moist air to the [[United Kingdom]] with many snow showers, fronts and polar lows bringing snowy weather with it.
* A cold wave affected much of the [[Deep South]] in the United States and [[Florida]] in January and February 2010.


'''1917-1918'''
'''2010–2011'''
*[[Winter of 2010–11 in Great Britain and Ireland]] – This winter was referred to as The Big Freeze by national media in both United Kingdom and Ireland and it was the coldest winter in Britain for 31 years with an average temperature of {{convert|1.51|C|lk=on}}. The UK had its second-coldest December on record, only behind December 1890, and is considered the coldest on record outside of England.
* Winter of 1917–1918 – The winter was very frigid across the East and created a heating fuel crisis equaled only in January 1977. Severe cold wave in December 1917 and January 1918 in northeast. December 30 set a number of record lows at the time in New York City ({{cvt|−13|F|disp=comma}}) and Boston ({{cvt|−15|F|disp=comma}}).<ref>Wagner, A. James. "The Record-Breaking Winter of 1976–77". ''Weatherwise'' 30 (1977), no. 2, pp. 65–69</ref> Under ideal conditions for radiational cooling, including fresh snow cover and mostly clear skies, the morning of December 30, 1917 was exceptionally cold also in parts of Virginia and West Virginia, with all-time record cold temperatures (that stand until nowadays) recorded in many cities, including {{cvt|-37|F}} at Lewisburg (West Virginia state record), {{cvt|-34|F}} at White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, {{cvt|-25|F}} at Bluefield, West Virginia, and {{cvt|-27|F}} at Blacksburg and Burkes Garden, Virginia. January 1918 also brought persistent well below average temperatures for many parts of the East and Midwest, with another shot of very cold air in early February (New York City Central Park's high of only {{cvt|4|F}} on February 5 is a monthly record, while Michigan's Houghton Lake reached a low of {{cvt|-48|F}} on February 1). The [[Ohio River]] froze solidly along its entire length.
*[[2011 New Zealand snowstorms]]- Caused by Antarctic storms moving upward, the whole country was affected briefly in July 2011, only for it to return even stronger in August for a prolonged period of time. Te Waipounamu/ The South Island was the hardest hit, although the generally more mild Te Ika-a-Maui/ The North Island was also affected to a large extent. Widespread and heavy snow fell in Wellington for the first time in twenty years, and in Auckland the first time since the 1930s. Despite this, the Kiwis, especially children, weren't disrupted by the snowstorms.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.nzherald.co.nz/|title=Snow falls in Auckland for first time in decades|last=Wade|first=NZPA, Amelia|newspaper=The New Zealand Herald|date=2011-08-15|access-date=2019-01-30|language=en-NZ|issn=1170-0777}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://storyful.com/stories/1000006477|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140201194052/http://storyful.com/stories/1000006477|url-status=dead|archive-date=2014-02-01|title=Kiwis marvel at Auckland and Wellington snow - Storyful|date=2014-02-01|access-date=2019-01-30}}</ref>
* This cold wave occurred not only in America but also East Asia. In Seoul, the weather is warm in early December 1917, But the temperature wasn't increased higher ({{cvt|32|F|disp=comma}}) next to starting cold wave in December 15 ~ January 9. In addition, the temperature was recorded lower ({{cvt|14|F|disp=comma}}) in December 15 ~ 31. The cold wave especially stronger in December 26 ~ 27 and the lowest temperature in December 26 was recorded ({{cvt|0.32|F|disp=comma}}), highest temperature ({{cvt|9.86|F|disp=comma}}).(That day Incheon was recorded highest temperature ({{cvt|9.14|F|disp=comma}}), this is 3rd lower highest temperature in whole winter.) Also, the lowest temperature in December 27 was recorded ({{cvt|−4.72|F|disp=comma}}), this temperature is 2nd lower temperature in December Seoul. (The lowest is ({{cvt|-9.58|F|disp=comma}}) on December 31, 1927. Furthermore, this is the lowest temperature in Seoul.) Cold wave was leading to January 1918, and the cold wave is rather than more stronger. Then the lowest temperature in January 3 was recorded ({{cvt|−7.24|F|disp=comma}}). The temperature was a little warming next to January 14. But the weather is still cold, and the temperature was recorded lower ({{cvt|14|F|disp=comma}}) until January 28. Leading to February, this cold wave was finished. Seoul was recorded the average temperature ({{cvt|21.74|F|disp=comma}}) in December 1917,(This is lowest average in December. and this average temperature was also recorded December 1944.) and recorded the average temperature ({{cvt|18.5|F|disp=comma}}) in January 1918, 6th lower in January.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://data.kma.go.kr/data/grnd/selectAsosRltmList.do?pgmNo=36|title=Korea weather data(1904~)(was served Korea Meteorological Administration)}}</ref>
* The cold wave was more stronger in North Korea, and the lowest temperature in Pyeongyang was recorded ({{cvt|−11.74|F|disp=comma}})<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://kosis.kr/statHtml/statHtml.do?orgId=999&tblId=DT_999N_012136&vw_cd=MT_CHOSUN_TITLE&list_id=999_Q02_A01_1&scrId=&seqNo=&lang_mode=ko&obj_var_id=&itm_id=&conn_path=K1&path=%25EA%25B5%25AD%25ED%2586%25A0%25C2%25B7%25EA%25B8%25B0%25ED%259B%2584%2520%253E%2520%25EA%25B8%25B0%25EC%2583%2581%25EC%25B5%259C%25EC%25A0%2580%2520%25EA%25B8%25B0%25EC%2598%25A8|title=The lowest temperature statistic before 1945(was served Statistics Korea)}}</ref> in December 1917. Also, the average temperature was recorded ({{cvt|12.56|F|disp=comma}}).)<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://kosis.kr/statHtml/statHtml.do?orgId=999&tblId=DT_999N_011136&vw_cd=MT_CHOSUN_TITLE&list_id=999_Q02_A01_1&scrId=&seqNo=&lang_mode=ko&obj_var_id=&itm_id=&conn_path=K1&path=%25EA%25B5%25AD%25ED%2586%25A0%25C2%25B7%25EA%25B8%25B0%25ED%259B%2584%2520%253E%2520%25EA%25B8%25B0%25EC%2583%2581%25ED%258F%2589%25EA%25B7%25A0%2520%25EA%25B8%25B0%25EC%2598%25A8|title=The month-average temperature statistic before 1945(was served Statistics Korea)}}</ref>


'''1916-1917'''
'''2012'''
* [[Early 2012 European cold wave]] – As of February 11, 2012, at least 590 people died during a cold snap with temperatures falling below {{convert|-35|C|F}} in some regions.<ref name="Pidd, Helen & Elder, Helen">{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/feb/03/europe-cold-energy-death-toll|title=European cold snap threatens energy crisis as death toll rises|first1=Helen|last1=Pidd|first2=Miriam|last2=Elder|date=3 February 2012|website=The Guardian|access-date=20 January 2018}}</ref> In [[Ukraine]], over 100 deaths were attributed to the cold.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.kyivpost.com/news/nation/detail/121772/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120204232211/http://www.kyivpost.com/news/nation/detail/121772/|url-status=dead|title=Kyiv Post: Ukraine Cold Spell Death Toll Rises 101|archive-date=February 4, 2012}}</ref>
*Winter of 1916–1917 – the "extended winter" (October to March) of 1916–17 was the coldest on record in the West and Midwest.


'''1912'''
'''2013'''
* [[2013 extreme weather events#United Kingdom|United Kingdom March–April 2013]] – The UK Spring 2013 cold wave was a prolonged spell of cold weather which brought with it very heavy snowfalls, the worst in March for 30 years and since 1947 in some places. There was also some very cold temperatures with England (CET) having its coldest March since 1883 with a mean monthly temperature of {{cvt|2.7|C}}. This meant that March was colder than all three winter months December 2012, January and February 2013.
* January 1912 cold wave – The severe [[1912 United States cold wave]] caused the longest recorded period of weather below {{convert|0|F|C|1|disp=or}}.
{{anchor |Spring 2013 North American cold wave}}
* Spring 2013 North American cold wave – Although the core winter of 2012–13 was fairly mild, both March and April were unusually cold across the Midwest, resulting in sharp temperature contrasts from March 2012 to March 2013 all over the United States and Canada. This late cold wave was unexpected because February and March 2013 were both forecasted to be even milder and more springlike than February and March 2012, but instead turned out with a near-average February and an unusually cold March. This same cold wave extended well into the month of April, as four notable winter storms impacted much of the northern United States, especially across Minnesota and the Dakotas. Minnesota experienced a rare May snowstorm as a result of this cold wave.
* In July 2013, South America experienced the most intense cold wave in 13 years. Some coastal areas of Argentina and Uruguay had multiple days of nearly freezing temperatures, and snow fell throughout Southern Brazil, even being registered in [[Curitiba]] for the first time since 1988.
* [[2013 Middle East cold snap]] - [[Cyprus]], [[Egypt]], [[Israel]], [[West Bank]], [[Jordan]], [[Lebanon]] and [[Syria]].


'''2013-2014'''
'''1904''' was the coolest year on record.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://mashable.com/article/climate-change-cold-records-rare/ |title = Earth's coldest years on record all happened over 90 years ago}}</ref>
* [[2013–14 North American winter#December cold wave|December 2013 North American cold wave]] – On December 1, the weakening of the polar vortex resulted in the jet stream shifting southward, which allowed abnormally cold temperatures to intrude the [[Central United States]]. On December 6, a daily record snowfall of {{convert|0.1|in|}} was set in the [[Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex]], breaking the old record of trace amounts of snow, set in 1950.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wunderground.com/US/tx/dallas.html |title=Dallas, TX Weather Forecast from Weather Underground |publisher=Wunderground.com |access-date=2013-12-06}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://weather.wfaa.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?brand=wfaa&target=wfaa&query=Dallas,TX |title=Dallas, Texas (75201) Conditions & Forecast |publisher=Weather.wfaa.com |access-date=2013-12-06 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131211011500/http://weather.wfaa.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?brand=wfaa&target=wfaa&query=Dallas%2CTX |archive-date=2013-12-11 }}</ref> The cold wave continued into December 10, before the temperatures returned to a more stable range.
* [[Early 2014 North American cold wave]] – On January 2–11, cold arctic air initially associated with a [[nor'easter]] invaded the central and eastern United States and Canada, east of the Rockies. Temperatures were even colder than the North Pole and the South Pole in many regions in the Upper Midwest and Canada. Temperatures reached as cold as {{cvt|−37|F|C}}, and did not even get out of the negative double-digit temps in many places, including [[Chicago, Illinois|Chicago]]. The cold wave extended for a few more months, bringing a continuous pattern of record-low temperatures to most of the Central and upper eastern United States, before the pattern finally ended in early April.


* '''2014-2015'''
===19th century cold waves (1801–1900)===
* [[November 2014 North American cold wave]] – Between November 8 and November 23, a polar vortex similar to earlier in 2014 has a temporary comeback, delivering the 2014–15 winter season's first three significant winter storms in the United States. Snowfall records were confirmed all over the Midwest and the Northeast, especially around the Great Lakes. [[Buffalo, New York]], was among the hardest hit in the unseasonably wintry November.
'''1899'''
* [[2014–15 North American winter#Early January winter storm & cold wave|February 2015 North American cold wave]] – During the second half of February 2015, temperature records were broken in both sides of the spectrum. Extreme warm records were broken in the western half of the United States and extreme cold records were broken in the eastern half. In addition to the extreme cold wave at its most brutal in the Great Lakes, Mid-Atlantic, and New England, snowfall was reported as far south as [[Tupelo, Mississippi]]; [[Huntsville, Alabama]]; and [[Shreveport, Louisiana]]. The cold wave became widespread and all the remaining mild conditions from the west were pushed into northern Mexico. The cold wave even extended well into early March, with a part of every U.S. state except [[Florida]] reporting a snow cover by March 1, 2015.
* [[Great Blizzard of 1899|February 1899 Cold Wave]] – Still ranked as number one cold wave outbreak in U.S. history to date.<ref name="weather.com"/>


'''1895'''
'''2016'''
* [[January 2016 East Asia cold wave]] – Caused over 100 known deaths across [[East Asia]], [[South Asia]] and [[Southeast Asia]].
* [[Winter of 1894–95 in the United Kingdom]].
* [[February 2016 North American cold wave|February 2016 North American cold snap]] – A cold wave hit North America during the second week of February 2016 which caused record-breaking wind chills and temperatures. New York City broke its record low of -1&nbsp;°F (−18&nbsp;°C), which was the first sub-zero reading for New York since January 19, 1994.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Winter 2016 Recap - Mild, With Cameo Appearances by Old Man Winter |url=https://thestarryeye.typepad.com/weather/2016/03/recap-of-winter-2016-mild-with-cameo-appearances-by-old-man-winter-.html |access-date=2022-07-07 |website=New York City Weather Archive}}</ref> On 13 February 2016, [[Whiteface Mountain]] underwent a record [[windchill]] of −114&nbsp;°F (−81&nbsp;°C), while in [[Boston, Massachusetts]], the [[temperature]] dropped to −9&nbsp;°F (−23&nbsp;°C), the coldest since 1957.
* February 1895 United States Cold Wave ([[Great Freeze]]) – Damaged citrus crops in Florida. A snowstorm produced unprecedented snowfall amounts along the Gulf Coast, including 22 inches (56&nbsp;cm) in [[Houston, TX]]. Snow fell as far south as [[Tampico, Mexico]], the lowest latitude in North America that snow has been recorded at sea level.


'''1893'''
'''2017'''
* April 2017 - During the same year, low temperatures were recorded in [[Sarajevo]] from an unusual snowfall that hit the city disrupting the traffic since [[Early 2012 European cold wave|the 2012 cold wave]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.sarajevotimes.com/snow-april-bosnia-herzegovina/|title = Snow in April in Bosnia and Herzegovina!|date = 19 April 2017}}</ref>
* 1893 East Asia Cold Wave – Produced snow in [[Hong Kong]] and South China, and freezing temperatures into tropical latitudes.
* [[January 2017 European cold wave]] – A cold wave hit Central and East Europe on January 5. The lowest temperature was {{convert|-45.4|C|F}} degrees.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.meteovesti.ru/news/63619645752-poteplenie-priblizhaetsya|title=Потепление приближается|language=ru|trans-title=The warming is coming|access-date=11 January 2017}}</ref> The cold caused at least 60 deaths. There was also massive snowfall.
* 1893 Eastern United States Cold Wave.


'''1888'''
'''2017–2018'''
* Cold wave of November 9–12, 2017. Record lows were broken from [[Minneapolis]] to [[Washington, D.C.]], as Arctic air swept through the areas.{{citation needed|date=December 2017}}
* [[1888 Northwest United States cold wave|1888 US cold wave]] – A severe cold wave that passed through the Pacific Northwest. It led to a blizzard for the northern Plains and upper Mississippi valley where many children were trapped in schoolhouses where they froze to death.
* [[2018 North American cold wave|Cold wave starting late December 2017]] (December 24 respectively), [[North America]]. A persistent wave of temperature extremes, including a cold wave, took place in Canada and the northeastern and central areas of the United States from Northern Canada to Mississippi, with temperatures in much of Canada of around {{convert|-29|C|F}} and as low as {{convert|-39|C|F}} in New York state, and as high as {{convert|21|C|F}} and {{convert|31|C|F}} in Sandberg and Los Angeles, respectively, in California.<ref name="Indep_NAmer20171230">{{cite news | last1=Sampathkumar | first1=Mythili | title=North America weather: Canadian zoo moves penguins indoors because of cold temperatures | date=2017-12-30 | work=[[The Independent]] | url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/calgary-zoo-penguins-cold-weather-canada-a8135121.html | access-date=2017-12-31 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171230221149/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/calgary-zoo-penguins-cold-weather-canada-a8135121.html | archive-date=2017-12-30 | url-status=dead }}</ref>


'''1886–1887'''
'''2018'''
* [[2018 Great Britain and Ireland cold wave|Late February and early–mid March 2018]], Europe. Easterly winds created bitter conditions, along with snow, twice during early spring 2018. [[Storm Emma (2018)|Storm Emma]], which affected southern areas of Great Britain, brought up to {{convert|50|cm|in}} of snow.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-43236763|title=Storm Emma to bring up to 50cm of snow|date=2 March 2018|access-date=2 March 2018|work=BBC News}}</ref> Overall, 93 people across Europe died; 27 deaths occurred in Poland and 17 in the UK.
* [[Winter of 1886–87]] in the United States Great Plains and Upper Midwest.
* Around early December 2018, some cold waves hit Central Russia and Kazakhstan, bringing temperatures several degrees down from the average. Big cities like [[Novosibirsk]], [[Krasnoyarsk]], [[Omsk]], [[Irkutsk]], and [[Barnaul]] had experienced temperatures of -10 C or lower.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=29638&month=12&year=2018 |title = Погода в Новосибирске - климатический монитор за декабрь 2018 года}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=28698&month=12&year=2018 |title = Погода в Омске - климатический монитор за декабрь 2018 года}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=29570&month=12&year=2018 |title = Погода в Красноярске - климатический монитор за декабрь 2018 года}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=30309&month=12&year=2018 |title = Погода в Братске - климатический монитор за декабрь 2018 года}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=29838&month=12&year=2018 |title = Погода в Барнауле - климатический монитор за декабрь 2018 года}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=29430&month=12&year=2018 |title = Погода в Томске - климатический монитор за декабрь 2018 года}}</ref> The cold wave dissipated in mid-December, but returned close to Christmas, impacting Central Russia and Kazakhstan strongly again, before finally dissipating around New Year's Eve. The lowest temperature, {{convert|-52.5|C|F}} happened in [[Yerbogachen]] on Christmas.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=24817&month=12&year=2018 |title = Погода в Ербогачене - климатический монитор за декабрь 2018 года}}</ref>


'''1882–1883'''
'''2019'''
* In late January, an [[January 2019 North American cold wave|extreme cold wave]] hit [[Canada]] and the [[Midwestern United States|midwest]] of the United States, bringing temperatures below {{convert|-30.0|C|F|abbr=}}, with all-time record lows set in several cities.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/2192369-so-far-2019-has-set-35-records-for-heat-and-2-for-cold/ |title = So far 2019 has set 35 records for heat and 2 for cold}}</ref> New York City had a low temperature of 2&nbsp;°F (-16&nbsp;°C), the coldest reading in Central Park since February 14, 2016, when the mercury dropped to -1&nbsp;°F (-18&nbsp;°C), the coldest sub-zero reading in [[New York City]] since January 19, 1994.<ref>{{Cite web |title=NYC Faces Wind Chills Well Below Zero After its First Snow Squall Warning |url=https://www.ny1.com/nyc/all-boroughs/news/2019/01/30/nyc-faces-wind-chills-well-below-zero-after-snow-squall |access-date=2022-06-29 |website=www.ny1.com |language=en}}</ref>
* Winter 1882–1883 in United States.
* February 2019: Brought temperatures 10~15 degrees lower than the February average lows, and temperatures of {{convert|-40|C|F}} degrees to many parts of Siberia again. [[Novosibirsk]], the largest city in Asian Russia, lowered to {{convert|-40.1|C|F}} on 2 February, just a fraction of a degree shy to its previous record in 1977.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=29638&month=2&year=2019 | title=Погода в Новосибирске - климатический монитор за февраль 2019 года}}</ref> [[Krasnoyarsk]] also lowered to {{convert|-41.3|C|F}} on 4 February, missing just 0.3&nbsp;°C to its record in 2001.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=29570&month=2&year=2019 | title=Погода в Красноярске - климатический монитор за февраль 2019 года}}</ref> [[Irkutsk]] Oblast had also recorded very low temperatures, with Irkutsk hitting {{convert|-37.7|C|F}} on 6 February, beating its previous record of 6 February,<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=30710&month=2&year=2019 | title=Погода в Иркутске - климатический монитор за февраль 2019 года}}</ref> [[Bratsk]] has seen temperatures below {{convert|-41.5|C|F}} on February 5, which is sometimes colder than cities like [[Yakutsk]]. 7 and 8 February was even more brutal, with [[Omsk]] as low as {{convert|-39.0|C|F}},<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=28698&month=2&year=2019 | title=Погода в Омске - климатический монитор за февраль 2019 года}}</ref> and a merciless record low {{convert|-41.9|C|F}} in [[Novokuznetsk]], just 0.3&nbsp;°C short of the record low in 1969.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=29842&month=2&year=2019 | title=Погода в Новокузнецке - климатический монитор за февраль 2019 года}}</ref> Lowest temperature in the cold wave of {{convert|-53.6|C|F}} was recorded in [[Vanavara (rural locality)|Vanavara]]<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.pogodaiklimat.ru/monitor.php?id=24908&month=2&year=2019 | title=Погода в Ванаваре - климатический монитор за февраль 2019 года}}</ref> The cold wave also lightly affected the [[Russian Far East]] and some parts North America. California experienced an unusually wet and cold February, where Los Angeles experienced its coldest February since 1962.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-cold-february-20190225-story.html|title=February is coldest in Los Angeles in nearly 60 years|website=[[Los Angeles Times]]|date=2019-02-25}}</ref>
* November 2019: [[2019-20 North American winter|North American cold wave]]
* November 2019: Turkish cold wave


'''1874–1875'''
'''2020'''
* February 2020: 2nd time snow falls in [[Baghdad]] since the 1910s.<ref name= baghdadsnowfall>[https://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/baghdad-sees-snow-for-the-1st-time-in-12-years/679070 Baghdad sees snow for the 1st time in 12 years] Accuweather {{Dead link|date=December 2021}}</ref>
* Winter 1874–1875 in Mid-Western United States.
* October 2020: The [[Rocky Mountains]] and [[Great Plains]] of the United States experienced record-cold temperatures. Subzero Fahrenheit temperatures (< -18&nbsp;°C) were recorded in [[Montana]], [[Wyoming]], [[Colorado]], and [[Nebraska]]. [[Bozeman, Montana]], reached {{convert|-20|F|C}} and [[Denver]], Colorado reached {{convert|4|F|C}}.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.accuweather.com/en/winter-weather/bitter-cold-obliterates-records-in-western-us-as-storm-dumps-snow-ice/837913 |title=Bitter cold obliterates records in western US as storm dumps snow, ice |first1=Lauren |last1=Fox |first2=Mark |last2=Puleo |date=October 27, 2020 |website=www.accuweather.com}}</ref>


'''1859'''
'''2021'''
*January 2021: Severe cold wave hit many regions in [[Eurasia]], especially in the Iberian Peninsula, Central Asia, South Asia, East Asia and Southeast Asia with some of the lowest temperatures in many years. In Spain, Clot del Tuc de la Llança in Catalonia in the Spanish Pyrenees recorded −34.1&nbsp;°C on January 6. It was not only the new national lowest temperature record in Spain, 2&nbsp;°C lower than the previous record in 1956, but also the lowest temperature in the whole [[Iberian Peninsula]] ever recorded. On 9 January another new record was attained with -35.6&nbsp;°C in Vega de Liordes, in the Cantabrian mountains of Spain. The cold wave was concurrent with a [[2021 snowstorm in Madrid|historic snowstorm]] which covered Madrid under 50 to 60&nbsp;cm of snow, the first time since 1971. [[Novosibirsk]] reached a low of -41&nbsp;°C. [[Beijing]] recorded a low of -19.6&nbsp;°C which was the coldest since 1966. [[Seoul]] also recorded -18.6&nbsp;°C in January 8 which was the tie record with 2001 and the coldest since 1986. Over 200&nbsp;cm of snow fell in western Japan along the Japan Sea coast.
* January 1859: January 10 – coldest single daytime temperatures ever recorded experienced in New York City and in New England areas. Montreal recorded temperature of {{cvt|-43.6|F}} at 7&nbsp;am, some {{cvt|15|F-change}} degrees lower than modern Montreal record of {{cvt|-29|F}} in 1933. Toronto recorded {{cvt|-27|F}} on the same day. At the University of Vermont in Burlington, {{cvt|-31.5|F}} was recorded at 7&nbsp;am and {{cvt|-26|F}} at 2&nbsp;pm. In Woodstock, Vermont a temperature of {{cvt|-45|F}} was recorded. Harvard College recorded {{cvt|-4.5|F}} at 2&nbsp;pm and {{cvt|-18|F}} the next morning of January 11, the lowest known temperature reading recorded in Boston. Nantucket Island measured {{cvt|-12|F}}, {{cvt|6|F-change}} colder than the modern known record. In New York City, recorded temperatures did not go above {{cvt|0|F}}. In Brooklyn Heights, a recorded reading of {{cvt|-9|F}} at noon and in Eramus Hall in Brooklyn recorded a high of {{cvt|-3.7|F}} at 7&nbsp;am and {{cvt|-8|F}} at 9&nbsp;pm that night. Union Hall in Jamaica Queens recorded {{cvt|-12|F}} at midnight between January 10 and 11. In White Plains, there were readings of {{cvt|-13|F}} at 7&nbsp;am, {{cvt|-10|F}} at 2&nbsp;pm, and {{cvt|-15|F}} at 9&nbsp;pm.<ref>Extreme Weather record book, 2007 edition, p. 61, Christopher Burt</ref>
*February 2021: Turkish cold wave
*February 2021: [[February 2021 North American cold wave]]
*May 2021: [[Sydney CBD]] recorded its coldest stretch of May days in 54 years due to a polar blast that swept across Australia's southeast, which kept the temperatures below {{Convert|9|C}} in the early mornings for five consecutive nights, in addition to the inland suburbs of [[Sydney]] dipping down to {{Convert|1|C}} in [[Camden, New South Wales|Camden]] and {{Convert|5|C}} in [[Sydney Olympic Park]].<ref>[https://www.9news.com.au/national/record-cold-weather-for-may-in-sydney-as-southeast-australia-continues-to-shiver/69ced3d8-2087-41c8-9f70-0d7babcac7a3 Sydney records coldest stretch of May days in 54 years] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210523063946/https://www.9news.com.au/national/record-cold-weather-for-may-in-sydney-as-southeast-australia-continues-to-shiver/69ced3d8-2087-41c8-9f70-0d7babcac7a3 |date=23 May 2021 }} by [[Nine News]], 20 May 2021. Retrieved 23 May 2021.</ref>
*June 2021, Sydney CBD had its coldest day since 1984 and the coldest June day since 1899, where it reached a maximum of just {{Convert|10.3|C}}. [[Bankstown]], a western suburb, only reached {{Convert|9.7|C}}, its coldest day in 50 years, with nearby suburbs registering a similar temperature.<ref>[https://www.9news.com.au/national/australia-national-weather-forecast-snow-heavy-rain-lashes-south-east/d7f66843-f996-44f0-a147-afcb62a1139f Sydney records coldest day in 37 years] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210610085323/https://www.9news.com.au/national/australia-national-weather-forecast-snow-heavy-rain-lashes-south-east/d7f66843-f996-44f0-a147-afcb62a1139f |date=10 June 2021 }} by Nine News</ref> These unusually cold maximums were caused by a [[cut-off low]].<ref>[https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/sydney-set-for-coldest-day-in-25-years-while-orange-blanketed-in-snow-20210610-p57zq8.html Sydney shivers through coldest day since 1984 as snow blankets NSW] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210610085322/https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/sydney-set-for-coldest-day-in-25-years-while-orange-blanketed-in-snow-20210610-p57zq8.html |date=10 June 2021 }} By Sarah McPhee and Daniella White from The Daily Telegraph. 10 June 2021</ref>


'''1857'''
'''2022'''
*February-March 2022: Turkish cold wave
* New England Cold wave of 1857. January 1857 was the coldest month ever recorded in New England. Average month temperatures of {{cvt|16.7|F}} in New Haven, {{cvt|16.8|F}} in Boston, and {{cvt|19.6|F}} in New York City remain coldest months on record in those cities. The worst of the cold descended on New England on January 22 with January 23 being one of the coldest days known in the region. In Bath, Maine a temperature reading of {{cvt|-52|F}} and in Franconia, New Hampshire {{cvt|-51|F}} were recorded. In Norwich, Vermont {{cvt|-44|F}} was recorded. Boston suburbs of Malden and West Newton recorded {{cvt|-30|F}} overnight. Boston temperatures for January 23 never rose above {{cvt|0|F}} all day and Nantucket Island was connected to the mainland by ice. In New York City, Erasmus Hall in Brooklyn reached a high of 0&nbsp;°F during the day and the Hudson River froze over solidly enough for people to walk across to Hoboken.<ref>Extreme Weather record book, 2007 edition, pp. 61-62, Christopher Burt</ref>
*May 2022: [[2022 South American cold wave]]
*June 2022: [[Aysén Region]] in southern Chile experienced unusually cold temperatures.<ref name="tortelcold">{{Cite news |title=Temperaturas extremas en el sur de Chile provocan que el mar se congele en el fiordo de Tortel |url=https://www.emol.com/noticias/Nacional/2022/06/27/1065208/mar-se-congelo-fiordo-tortel.html |date=2022-06-27 |access-date=2022-07-04 |work=[[El Mercurio|Emol]] |language=Spanish}}</ref> In numerous locations, temperatures dropped below -10 C.<ref name="tortelcold" /> In one case it reached -14 C.<ref name="tortelcold" /> Parts of [[Tortel Fjord]] and [[Simpson River]] froze.<ref name="tortelcold" /> In [[Los Lagos Region]], north of Aysén Region, temperatures of -5 C were registered.<ref name="tortelcold" />
*December 2022: [[Late December 2022 North American winter storm]]


'''1835'''
* Eastern cold wave of January and February 1835. First of three historic U.S. cold waves to hit during the 19th century (1835, 1857, 1899). In January, mercury thermometers froze throughout the Northeast. Mercury froze at {{cvt|-40|F}} in Bangor and Bath, Maine and Montpelier and White River, Vermont. In Connecticut, Hartford hit {{cvt|-27|F}} and New Haven {{cvt|-23|F}}, and in Massachusetts, Williamstown hit {{cvt|-30|F}} and Pittsfield {{cvt|-32|F}}, all low temperature marks that have never been matched since. In February, Savannah, Georgia the temperature hit {{cvt|0|F}}, {{cvt|8|F-change}} colder than would be reached during the 1899 cold wave later in the century and Charleston South Carolina hit {{cvt|2|F}}.<ref>Extreme Weather record book, 2007 edition, p. 60, Christopher Burt</ref>


'''2023'''
===18th century cold waves (1701–1800)===
*February 2023: [[February 2023 North American cold wave]]
* [[Great Frost of 1709]].



===17th century cold waves (1601–1700)===
'''2024'''
* Europe winter of 1694–1695. See [[Maunder Minimum]]
*January 2024: [[2023–24 North American winter|Mid-January 2024 North American Cold Wave]] - Freezing temperatures affected campaign events leading up to the [[Iowa Caucuses]] on January 15, and could affect turnout in the first contest in the 2024 presidential primaries and caucuses.<ref>[https://apnews.com/article/iowa-winter-weather-caucus-campaign-events-canceled-a4fd8a5550a05166534f7b330560cbc9 Iowa campaign events are falling as fast as the snow as the state readies for record-cold caucuses], [[Associated Press]], January 12, 2024</ref> In addition, the cold temperatures resulted in the 4th coldest [[2023-24 NFL playoffs#AFC: Kansas City Chiefs 26, Miami Dolphins 7|NFL game]] on record between the [[Kansas City Chiefs]] and [[Miami Dolphins]], with kickoff temperature being {{convert|-4|F|C}}.<ref>[https://abcnews.go.com/amp/Sports/wireStory/chiefs-dolphins-approach-nfl-record-coldest-game-bills-106352390 Chiefs and Dolphins play fourth-coldest game in NFL history at minus-4 degrees], ABC News, January 13, 2024</ref> 15 people were hospitalized due to the cold temperatures during the game.<ref>[https://www.wunderground.com/article/news/weather/news/2024-01-16-winter-storm-heather-arctic-cold-schools-airports-roads Here's How Winter Storm Heather And Arctic Cold Affected Communities Across The U.S.], Weather Underground, January 16, 2024</ref> Wind chills following the storm reached as low as {{convert|-60|F|C}} in [[Montana]], and wind chills were still {{convert|-9|F|C}} as far south as [[Dallas]] on January 14.<ref>[https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/14/us/cold-snow-blizzards-weather.html Dangerous Subzero Wind Chills Blanket Much of the U.S.], [[New York Times]], January 14, 2024</ref> On January 13, [[Dillon, Montana]] reached an all time record low of {{convert|-42|F|C}}, while [[Bozeman, Montana]] recorded their second coldest temperature at {{convert|-45|F|C}}.<ref>[https://www.kbzk.com/weather/historic-cold-grips-sw-montana Historic cold grips SW Montana], KBZK, January 13, 2024</ref> That same day, [[Dickinson, North Dakota]] reached a {{convert|-70|F|C}} wind chill, their coldest since the wind chill formula was updated in 2001, and a {{convert|-33|F|C}} air temperature, a daily record and their coldest temperature since 1990.<ref>[https://www.kfyrtv.com/2024/01/15/records-set-over-weekend-recapping-coldest-part-our-arctic-blast/?outputType=amp Records set over the weekend; recapping the coldest part of our Arctic blast], KFYRTV, January 14, 2024</ref> On January 16, [[Houston]] dropped to a daily record low of {{convert|19|F|C}}.<ref>{{cite news |title=Houston breaks low temperature record for Jan. 16 as freeze sweeps Texas |url=https://www.chron.com/weather/article/houston-freeze-texas-18610377.php |access-date=January 17, 2024 |publisher=Chron |date=January 16, 2024}}</ref>
* [[Great Frost of 1683–84]], the worst frost in England in its history. The cold caused the entire [[River Thames]] to freeze up to a depth of {{convert|1|ft}}. The frost enabled the [[River Thames Frost Fair]]. See [[Maunder Minimum]]


==See also==
==See also==
Line 294: Line 303:
*[[Arctic dipole anomaly]]
*[[Arctic dipole anomaly]]
*[[River Thames frost fairs]]
*[[River Thames frost fairs]]
*[[Heat wave]]
*[[Polar front]]
*[[Polar front]]
*[[Polar vortex]]
*[[Polar vortex]]
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[[Category:Weather events]]
[[Category:Weather events]]
[[Category:Natural disasters]]
[[Category:Natural disasters]]
[[Category:Snow or ice weather phenomena]]

Latest revision as of 23:16, 5 December 2024

A cold wave (known in some regions as a cold snap, cold spell or Arctic Snap) is a weather phenomenon that is distinguished by a cooling of the air. Specifically, as used by the U.S. National Weather Service, a cold wave is a rapid fall in temperature within a 24-hour period requiring substantially increased protection to agriculture, industry, commerce, and social activities. The precise criteria for a cold wave are the rate at which the temperature falls, and the minimum to which it falls. This minimum temperature is dependent on the geographical region and time of year.[1]

In the United States, a cold spell is defined as the national average high temperature dropping below 20 °F (−7 °C).[2] A cold wave of sufficient magnitude and duration may be classified as a cold air outbreak (CAO).[3][4]

Effects

[edit]

A cold wave can cause death and injury to livestock and wildlife. Exposure to cold mandates greater caloric intake for all animals, including humans, and if a cold wave is accompanied by heavy and persistent snow, grazing animals may be unable to reach needed food and die of hypothermia or starvation. They often necessitate the purchase of foodstuffs to feed livestock at considerable cost to farmers.

Cold spells are associated with increased mortality rates in populations around the world.[5] Both cold waves and heat waves cause deaths, though different groups of people may be susceptible to different weather events.[6] More temperature-attributable deaths occur during a cold wave than in a heat wave,[7][8] though the mortality rate is higher in undeveloped regions of the world. Extreme winter cold often causes poorly insulated water pipelines and mains to freeze. Even some poorly protected indoor plumbing ruptures as water expands within them, causing much damage to property and costly insurance claims. Demand for electrical power and fuels rises dramatically during such times, even though the generation of electrical power may fail due to the freezing of water necessary for the generation of hydroelectricity. Some metals may become brittle at low temperatures. Motor vehicles may fail when antifreeze fails or motor oil gels, producing a failure of the transportation system.

Fires become even more of a hazard during extreme cold. Water mains may break and water supplies may become unreliable, making firefighting more difficult. The air during a cold wave is typically denser and thus contains more oxygen, so when air that a fire draws in becomes unusually cold it is likely to cause a more intense fire.[citation needed] However, snow may stop spreading of fires, especially wildfires.

Winter cold waves that are not considered cold in some areas, but cause temperatures significantly below average for an area, are also destructive. Areas with subtropical climates may recognize a cold wave at higher temperatures than other, colder areas of the globe. The cold wave may be recognized at barely freezing temperatures, as these are still unusually cold for the region, and plant and animal life will be less tolerant of such cold. The same winter temperatures that one associates with the norm for Colorado, Ohio, or Bavaria are catastrophic to crops in places like Florida, California, or parts of South America that grow fruit and vegetables in winter.

Cold waves that bring unexpected freezes and frosts during the growing season in mid-latitude zones can kill plants during the early and most vulnerable stages of growth, resulting in crop failure as plants are killed before they can be harvested economically. Such cold waves have caused famines. At times as deadly to plants as drought, cold waves can leave land in danger of later brush and forest fires that consume dead biomass. One extreme was the so-called Year Without a Summer of 1816, one of several years during the 1810s in which numerous crops failed during freakish summer cold snaps after volcanic eruptions that reduced incoming sunlight.

Recent research suggests a possible link between cold waves in North America and extratropical cyclogenesis over the East Atlantic.[9] These may be connected by large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns. [10] Examples include Rossby wave propagation from the North Pacific or an upper-level anticyclone west of Greenland.[11] In Europe, the advection of cold air masses from the northeast emerges as a potential precursor signal for the majority of cold waves, significantly affecting the energy, health, and agricultural sectors of the continent.[12]

Countermeasures

[edit]

In some places, such as Siberia, extreme cold requires that fuel-powered machinery intended to be used occasionally must be run continually. Internal plumbing can be wrapped, and persons can often run water continuously through pipes. Energy conservation, difficult as it is in a cold wave, may require such measures as collecting people (especially the poor and elderly) in communal shelters. Even the homeless may be arrested and taken to shelters, only to be released when the hazard abates.[13] Hospitals can prepare for the admission of victims of frostbite and hypothermia; schools and other public buildings can be converted into shelters.

People can stock up on food, water, and other necessities before a cold wave. Some may even choose to migrate to places of milder climates, at least during the winter. Suitable stocks of forage can be secured before cold waves for livestock, and livestock in vulnerable areas might be shipped from affected areas or even slaughtered. Smudge pots can bring smoke that prevents hard freezes on a farm or grove. Vulnerable crops may be sprayed with water that will paradoxically protect the plants by freezing and absorbing the cold from surrounding air.

Most people can dress appropriately and can layer their clothing should they need to go outside or should their heating fail. They can also stock candles, matches, flashlights, and portable fuel for cooking and wood for fireplaces or wood stoves, as necessary. However, caution should be taken as the use of charcoal fires for cooking or heating within an enclosed dwelling is extremely dangerous due to carbon monoxide poisoning. Adults must remain aware of the exposure that children and the elderly have to cold.

Historical cold waves

[edit]

17th century cold waves (1601–1700)

[edit]

18th century cold waves (1701–1800)

[edit]

19th century cold waves (1801–1900)

[edit]

1835

  • Eastern cold wave of January and February 1835. First of three historic U.S. cold waves to hit during the 19th century (1835, 1857, 1899). In January, mercury thermometers froze throughout the Northeast. Mercury froze at −40 °F (−40 °C) in Bangor and Bath, Maine and Montpelier and White River, Vermont. In Connecticut, Hartford hit −27 °F (−33 °C) and New Haven −23 °F (−31 °C), and in Massachusetts, Williamstown hit −30 °F (−34 °C) and Pittsfield −32 °F (−36 °C), all low temperature marks that have never been matched since. In February, Savannah, Georgia the temperature hit 0 °F (−18 °C), 8 °F (4.4 °C) colder than would be reached during the 1899 cold wave later in the century and Charleston South Carolina hit 2 °F (−17 °C).[14]

1836

  • Last reported snowfall in Sydney, Australia occurred on 28 June of that year. British settlers in Hyde Park woke up to snow "nearly 1 in (2.5 cm) deep", with the meteorological table in The Sydney Herald recording that on the morning of the snow the temperature dropped to 3 °C (37 °F).[15]

1857

  • New England Cold wave of 1857. January 1857 was the coldest month ever recorded in New England. Average month temperatures of 16.7 °F (−8.5 °C) in New Haven, 16.8 °F (−8.4 °C) in Boston, and 19.6 °F (−6.9 °C) in New York City remain coldest months on record in those cities. The worst of the cold descended on New England on January 22 with January 23 being one of the coldest days known in the region. In Bath, Maine a temperature reading of −52 °F (−47 °C) and in Franconia, New Hampshire −51 °F (−46 °C) were recorded. In Norwich, Vermont −44 °F (−42 °C) was recorded. Boston suburbs of Malden and West Newton recorded −30 °F (−34 °C) overnight. Boston temperatures for January 23 never rose above 0 °F (−18 °C) all day and Nantucket Island was connected to the mainland by ice. In New York City, Erasmus Hall in Brooklyn reached a high of 0 °F during the day and the Hudson River froze over solidly enough for people to walk across to Hoboken.[16]

1859

  • January 1859: January 10 – coldest single daytime temperatures ever recorded experienced in New York City and in New England areas. Montreal recorded temperature of −43.6 °F (−42.0 °C) at 7 am, some 15 °F (8.3 °C) degrees lower than modern Montreal record of −29 °F (−34 °C) in 1933. Toronto recorded −27 °F (−33 °C) on the same day. At the University of Vermont in Burlington, −31.5 °F (−35.3 °C) was recorded at 7 am and −26 °F (−32 °C) at 2 pm. In Woodstock, Vermont a temperature of −45 °F (−43 °C) was recorded. Harvard College recorded −4.5 °F (−20.3 °C) at 2 pm and −18 °F (−28 °C) the next morning of January 11, the lowest known temperature reading recorded in Boston. Nantucket Island measured −12 °F (−24 °C), 6 °F (3.3 °C) colder than the modern known record. In New York City, recorded temperatures did not go above 0 °F (−18 °C). In Brooklyn Heights, a recorded reading of −9 °F (−23 °C) at noon and in Eramus Hall in Brooklyn recorded a high of −3.7 °F (−19.8 °C) at 7 am and −8 °F (−22 °C) at 9 pm that night. Union Hall in Jamaica Queens recorded −12 °F (−24 °C) at midnight between January 10 and 11. In White Plains, there were readings of −13 °F (−25 °C) at 7 am, −10 °F (−23 °C) at 2 pm, and −15 °F (−26 °C) at 9 pm.[17]

1874–1875

  • Winter 1874–1875 in Mid-Western United States.

1882–1883

  • Winter 1882–1883 in United States.

1886–1887

1888

  • 1888 US cold wave – A severe cold wave that passed through the Pacific Northwest. It led to a blizzard for the northern Plains and upper Mississippi valley where many children were trapped in schoolhouses where they froze to death.

1893

  • 1893 East Asia Cold Wave – Produced snow in Hong Kong and South China, and freezing temperatures into tropical latitudes.
  • 1893 Eastern United States Cold Wave.

1895

1899

20th-century cold waves (1901–2000)

[edit]

1904

  • The winter of 1904 was the coolest year on record worldwide.[19]

1912

  • January 1912 cold wave – The severe 1912 United States cold wave caused the longest recorded period of weather below 0 °F or −17.8 °C.

1916-1917

  • Winter of 1916–1917 – the "extended winter" (October to March) of 1916–17 was the coldest on record in the West and Midwest.

1917-1918

  • Winter of 1917–1918 – The winter was very frigid across the East and created a heating fuel crisis equaled only in January 1977. Severe cold wave in December 1917 and January 1918 in northeast. December 30 set a number of record lows at the time in New York City (−13 °F, −25 °C) and Boston (−15 °F, −26 °C).[20] Under ideal conditions for radiational cooling, including fresh snow cover and mostly clear skies, the morning of December 30, 1917, was exceptionally cold also in parts of Virginia and West Virginia, with all-time record cold temperatures (that stand until nowadays) recorded in many cities, including −37 °F (−38 °C) at Lewisburg (West Virginia state record), −34 °F (−37 °C) at White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, −25 °F (−32 °C) at Bluefield, West Virginia, and −27 °F (−33 °C) at Blacksburg and Burke's Garden, Virginia. January 1918 also brought persistent well below average temperatures for many parts of the East and Midwest, with another shot of very cold air in early February (New York City Central Park's high of only 4 °F (−16 °C) on February 5 is a monthly record, while Michigan's Houghton Lake reached a low of −48 °F (−44 °C) on February 1). The Ohio River froze solidly along its entire length.
  • This cold wave occurred not only in America but also East Asia. In Seoul, the weather was warm in early December 1917, but the temperature didn't go above (32 °F, 0 °C) during the cold wave from December 15–January 9. In addition, the temperature went lower than (14 °F, −10 °C) from December 15–31. The cold wave was especially fierce from December 26–27 and the low temperature on December 26 was (0.32 °F, −17.60 °C), while the high temperature was (9.86 °F, −12.30 °C). That day Incheon recorded a high temperature of (9.14 °F, −12.70 °C), this was the 3rd lowest high temperature recorded during winter. Also, the low temperature on December 27 was (−4.72 °F, −20.40 °C), this temperature is 2nd coldest temperature recorded in December in Seoul. (The lowest was (−9.58 °F, −23.10 °C) on December 31, 1927). The cold wave continued into January 1918, where it intensified. The low temperature on January 3 was (−7.24 °F, −21.80 °C). The temperature was a slightly warmer on January 14, but the weather was still quite cold, and the low temperatures were at (14 °F, −10 °C) or lower until January 28. Leading into February, this cold wave dissipated. Seoul was had an average temperature of (21.74 °F, −5.70 °C) in December 1917, the lowest average recorded in December, and recorded an average temperature of (18.5 °F, −7.5 °C) in January 1918, the 6th lowest recorded in January.[21]
  • The cold wave also impacted North Korea, and the lowest temperature in Pyeongyang was (−11.74 °F, −24.30 °C)[22] in December 1917. Also, the average temperature was (12.56 °F, −10.80 °C).)[23]

1930

  • A cold wave gripped the western United States in January 1930. Two inches of snow fell in Palm Springs, CA on January 11, one of only two times in the city's history that snow was ever observed.[24]

1932

  • Major cold outbreaks affected California in January, February and December. Up to two inches of snow fell across the Los Angeles Basin on January 15, and two inches of snow was officially recorded at the Downtown Los Angeles Weather Bureau Office.[25] Snow also fell in San Francisco on three days in December 1932.

1933

  • 1933 Western United States cold wave – The winter of 1932–33 was the second- or third-coldest on record[26] in most of the West (the coldest on record in Arizona[27]) and saw record cold temperatures in Seneca, Oregon (-54 °F/-48 °C), Moran, Wyoming (-66 °F/-54 °C) and Seminole, Texas (-23 °F/-31 °F) between February 7 and 10,[28] when sixty deaths were blamed on extreme cold and ice storms.

1934

  • February 1934 Cold Wave in New England and Eastern Canada – Longest period of cold weather ever experienced to this point. Average temperatures in upper New England and Eastern Canada were around zero degrees Fahrenheit for most of the month. Lake Ontario was reportedly completely frozen over. Temperatures reached above freezing only on one day in Burlington, VT in February.[29]

1936

  • 1936 North American cold wave – The cold wave of 1936 was the only cold wave of the 1930s to severely impact the United States east of the hundredth meridian. One of the coldest winters in the Great Plains on record. Low temperatures dropped below −50 °F (−46 °C) in Malta, Montana on four separate days and most of Montana averaged 20 degrees below normal for the entire month of February Parshall, North Dakota hit −60 °F (−51 °C) on February 15, still a record. Langdon, North Dakota remained below 0 °F (−18 °C) for 41 straight days from January 11 to February 20, the longest stretch in recorded history for the U.S. outside of Alaska. The cold wave was followed by one of the hottest summers on record, the 1936 North American heat wave.[30]

1937

  • 1937 Western United States cold wave – January 1937 was the coldest month on record in the West and saw snowfall as far south as the hot desert city of Yuma, Arizona, for one of only two occasions on record. California and Nevada saw their lowest temperatures on record: −45 °F (−42.8 °C) at Boca on January 20 and −50 °F (−45.6 °C) at San Jacinto on January 8.[28]

1940

  • January 1940 Southern United States cold wave – Late January saw record-breaking cold and snow across the Southern United States. It was the coldest month there since February 1899.

1941–1942

1947

1949

  • January 1949 Western United States cold wave – The winter of 1948–49 was the coldest since 1891 over the Western United States and saw record snowfall, ice storms as far south as Texas, and constant disruptions to surface transport, along with large losses in livestock and crops. Coldest winter was recorded in many places in California, Nevada, Idaho and Washington state. The cold was also accompanied by severe blizzards which isolated Wyoming ranches and paralyzed the Great Basin region. The U.S. Army ran "Operation Hay Lift" in the region to bring food and hay by plane to isolated ranches in the region. Las Vegas Nevada got a record 16.7 in (420 mm) of snowfall during the month of January. Snow fell in both San Diego and Los Angeles on three days in January 1949. All-time record low of 0 °F in San Antonio, Texas.[32]

1950

  • 1950 Northwest North American cold wave – January 1950 saw unprecedented cold and snowfall in the Pacific Northwest, with normally mild Seattle and Portland, Oregon, both falling below 0 °F (−17.8 °C) and receiving extremely heavy snow that disrupted transport and schooling as it could not be removed easily. Western Canada saw by far its coldest month on record, leading to severe damage to fruit crops in the Okanagan Valley, the freezing of Okanagan Lake for the only time since 1862, and Calgary's only month where temperatures remained below 32 °F (0 °C) throughout. Vancouver, British Columbia, had an average temperature of −6.3 °C (20.7 °F),[33] compared to the average 4.1 °C (39.4 °F).[34]

1954-1955

  • Winter of 1954–1955 in East Asia – One of the coldest winters on record across China. Numerous major rivers and lakes froze over across southern China, including the Huai River, Han River, and Dongting Lake.
  • Between Late July and Early August 1955 the most intense cold wave ever recorded in Brazil was registered. It snowed heavily for over 24 hours in some cities of the south of the country, accumulating over 2 feet (60 cm) in the mountainous regions of Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina states. The cold air reached the Amazon and even crossed the Equator, which is extremely rare. Temperatures plummeted to -10 °C (14 °F) in Bom Jesus, Rio Grande do Sul, and -2 °C (29 °F) in São Paulo (negative temperatures were never again recorded in the city center).

1956

  • 1956 European cold wave – February 1956 was the coldest month of the twentieth century over large areas of Western Europe,[35] with mean temperatures below 0 °C (32 °F) as far south as Marseilles being utterly unprecedented in records dating back into the eighteenth century.

1962–1963

  • Winter of 1962–63 in the United Kingdom – The winter of 1962–63 was the coldest for 223 years in England, and the freeze was accompanied by strong easterly winds and the freezing of rivers and streams.
  • January 1963 cold wave in Mid-Western United States, as well as a brief-but-severe cold spell in the western United States.

1966

  • 1966 Western Canadian cold wave – January 1966 was the coldest January on record in the Yukon and the coldest since 1950 or 1936 in the Prairie Provinces, and the severe cold continued into March, when Winnipeg recorded its most severe winter snowstorm on record.

1968–1969

  • Winter of 1968–69 in Central AsiaCentral Asia and western Siberia saw by far their coldest winter on record in 1968–69,[35][36] and in Central Asia also their wettest, producing record low temperature, severe blizzards and avalanches, numerous plant deaths and record spring flooding. The cold occasionally swept into East Asia, resulting in record snowstorms and cold in China and Japan.
  • 1969 Northwest North American cold wave – December 1968 and January 1969 saw record cold and snow in the Pacific Northwest and Southern BC. Vancouver, BC recorded its coldest temperature on record of −23.3 °C (−9.9 °F) on January 23, 1969, and −18.3 °C (−0.9 °F) at the airport on December 29, 1968. Seattle recorded its snowiest winter on record with 67.5 inches (171 cm) for the season at Sea-Tac Airport.

1975

  • July 1975 was a historic month in South America. One of the most intense cold waves of the century climbed through the continent, even crossing the Equator in the Amazon Forest. On July 16, snow fell heavily in Argentina, and on the following day in Paraguay and Southern Brazil. In Curitiba it snowed for around 6 hours, accumulating on the ground, even in the city center. The phenomenon was registered in 5 states, a very rare occurrence. In July 18, the temperature dropped even more. In the state of Paraná, the coffee crops were killed by an episode of black frost (it occurs when the plants' tissues freeze and die), and some cities recorded -10 °C (14 °F), among the lowest temperatures ever recorded in the country. The cold wave reached as far as 10°N before dissipating.[37]

1977

  • Cold wave of January 1977. Greatest eastern US cold wave of the 20th century. The core of the cold air extended from New Hampshire to Florida and west to Iowa and Missouri. Ohio was at the very center of the cold air mass where every weather station there recorded its coldest month on record. Cincinnati recorded its lowest known temperature of −25 °F (−32 °C) dating back to 1820. The South Carolina state record temperature of −20 °F (−29 °C) was recorded during this cold wave near Long Creek. The wind chill in Minneapolis was −78 °F (−61 °C) on January 28, possibility the lowest ever recorded there up until that point. Snow fell in Miami and Homestead Florida, the farthest south snow was ever recorded in America. President Jimmy Carter walked in his inauguration parade in temperatures below freezing on January 20. Buffalo, New York was hit with its worst blizzard ever during the last week of January where near hurricane-force winds created whiteout conditions for three days. Temperatures in Buffalo were around 0 °F (−18 °C), wind chills recorded of −60 °F (−51 °C)using the old formula, and the blizzard paralyzed the city with snow drifts of up to 30 feet (9.1 m).[38]

1978

  • Cold wave of early 1978 – Produced one of the coldest winters on record in all states east of the Rockies, except Maine.
  • Europe and Asia, winter of 1978–1979, caused by the Kara Sea 1978 anticyclone. Weather conditions typical for polar regions were detected in Moscow, Leningrad (St. Petersburg), and Sverdlovsk (Yekaterinburg), affecting logistics and the energy industry, and causing fires at the Beloyarskaya Nuclear powerplant.[39] Freeze, but a lack of snow caused winter cereal crop failure throughout 1979.

1979

  • Cold wave of 1979 – widespread cold across the United States. One of the largest Chicago snowstorms in history at the time, with 21 inches of snowfall in the two-day period, the 1979 Chicago Blizzard occurred during the cold wave in January.
  • Late 1970s (1977, 1978, 1979) – In the last three years of the 1970s, almost all of the conterminous United States had at least one winter with a memorable cold wave, and the winter of 1978–79 was the coldest on record in the lower 48[citation needed], with everywhere, except normally frigid upstate Maine, experiencing well below average temperatures.

1981–1982

  • Winter of 1981/82 in the United Kingdom – This was a significantly colder than average winter. December started off very mild with temperatures up to 15 °C (59 °F), but it quickly became very cold and snowy. The night of the 12th–13th is particularly noted for its cold temperatures with many records broken. January 1982 was also a cold and snowy month with records being broken on the 10th in both England and Scotland. England recorded a record low of −26.1 °C (−15.0 °F) and down to −27.2 °C (−17.0 °F) in Braemar.
  • January 1982 cold air outbreak – January 1982 was very cold. The 1981 AFC Championship Game, held in Cincinnati, was nicknamed the "Freezer Bowl" due to the −9 °F (−22.8 °C) temperature at kickoff and −59 °F (−50.6 °C) wind chill. The Sunday of the following week (January 17, 1982) is also known as Cold Sunday. Chicago's Midway and O'Hare airports record their all-time low temperatures of −26 °F (−32 °C). Milwaukee, Wisconsin recorded temperatures of −26 °F (−32 °C) on January 17, the lowest in 111 years there. Recorded temperature of −5 °F (−21 °C) in Atlanta and Jackson, Mississippi.[18]

1983

  • December 1983 Great Plains cold wave – The contiguous US had its coldest ever Christmas in 1983, except for the southwestern US. Severely cold winds blew in from Canada and about 70% of the month was colder than average. Many locations east of the Rockies broke December cold records on Christmas Eve. In addition to −23 °F (−30.6 °C) cold, the Sioux Falls area had 60 mph (97 km/h) winds bringing wind chills down to −70 °F (−56.7 °C). High temperatures did not even reach −10 °F (−23.3 °C) in northern Illinois during the days before Christmas.[40] Temperatures dropped below 0 °F (−17.8 °C) on December 15 and remained there for over nine days at Sioux Falls.[41] Minneapolis recorded an average temperature for the month of 3.7 °F (−15.7 °C), the coldest on record.[42] In Chicago, a temperature of −23 °F (−30.6 °C) and 30 mph winds resulted in a wind chill of −82 °F (−63.3 °C) (−57 °F (−49.4 °C) under the new formula) on Christmas Eve.

1985–1986

  • 1985 Great Western cold air outbreak – February 1985 saw the contiguous U.S.'s second-coldest temperature of −69 °F (−56.1 °C) in Peter Sinks, Utah. About a month of severe cold affected a large part of the nation. 1985 became the fourth-coldest calendar year on record in the Pacific Northwest.[citation needed]
  • January 1985 – January 1985 was the coldest January since 1979 in the United Kingdom with significantly below-average temperatures.
  • January 1985 US cold air outbreak – On January 21, 1985, it was so cold that President Ronald Reagan's inauguration took place in the Capitol Rotunda. In addition to the cold in Washington, D.C., Miami Beach recorded its only frost since records began, lasting for a full three hours. Several other Southern cities set all-time record cold.
  • Winter of 1985/86 in the United Kingdom – The cold weather started in November 1985 with the month being considerably below average, being the coldest since at least 1925. December 1985 was a milder month and January was close to average. February was the coldest month since February 1947 in United Kingdom and it became the 5th coldest February in the CET records dating back to 1659.
  • July 1986 – A polar blast in southeastern Australia brought sea level snow to the cities of Melbourne, Launceston and Hobart, with melting snow flurries even reported in parts of Sydney.[43][44]

1987

  • January 1987 Southeast England snowfall – This was a notably cold winter month for the United Kingdom and snowy too, especially so for the southeast with a very heavy lake-effect type snow event that affected the areas of East Anglia, south-east England and London between 11 and 14 January. It was the heaviest snowfall since 1981/82.
  • March 1987 Greece cold wave - very rare cold air mass trapping phenomenon - The cold wave of March '87 lasted at least ten days in Athens and more in northern Greece according to weather reports and caused by a cold air mass that was trapped in the region of Greece after a high pressure system had been extended pushing trapped cold air from Russia.[45]

1989

  • February 1989 featured a significant, week-long cold wave across the Western United States. Major cities affected by the cold stretched from Seattle, WA to as far south as Los Angeles, CA. Las Vegas set a record low for February with 16 °F (−8.9 °C) degrees on February 7, 1989.
  • December 1989 United States cold wave – In late 1989, the central and eastern United States saw one of the coldest Decembers on record. A white Christmas occurred.

1990–1991

  • Winter of 1990–91 in Western Europe – This winter was noted for its effects especially on the United Kingdom and for two significantly heavy snowfalls which occurred in December 1990 and February 1991, such snowfalls would not be seen again until February 2009. The winter was the coldest since January 1987.
  • December 1990 western United States – Extreme cold dropped down from Canada in the second half of December, causing record low temperatures up and down the West Coast, including one of California's most damaging freezes since 1949.

1994

  • 1994 Northern US/Southern Canada cold outbreak – January 1994 was the coldest month ever recorded or since January 1977 or February 1934 over many parts of the northeast and north-central United States, plus adjacent southeastern Canada. Many overnight record lows were set. Cold outbreaks continued into February but the severity eased somewhat. Detroit, Michigan saw the city's coldest temperature since 1985.

1995

  • 1995 White Earthquake in southern Chile – In August 1995 southern Chile was struck by a cold wave consisting of two successive cold fronts. Fodder scarcity caused a severe livestock starvation. Cows and sheep were also buried in snow. In parts of Tierra del Fuego up to 80% of the sheep died.
  • December 1995 Great Britain cold wave – On the 30th of December the United Kingdom recorded a record low of −27.2 °C (−17.0 °F) in Altnaharra in Scotland equalling the record set on February 11, 1895, and January 10, 1982.

1996

  • 1996 Great Midwest cold outbreak – Late January and early February was Northern Minnesota's coldest short-term period on record. The record low of −60 °F (−51.1 °C) was recorded in Tower, Minnesota. Cities like Minneapolis experienced temperatures near −35 °F (−37.2 °C).

1997

  • 1997 Northern Plains cold air outbreak – Mid-January across the Northern U.S. was one of the windiest on record. With a low of around −40 °F (−40.0 °C) in some places, wind caused bitterly cold wind chills sometimes nearing −80 °F (−62.2 °C). Northern parts of North Dakota saw up to 90 inches (2.29 m) of snow. This was one of the most severe cold-air outbreaks of the 1990s.

2000

  • July 2000 was one of the coldest months on record in South America. 4 streams of cold air pushed through the continent in a matter of 2 weeks, causing extremely low temperatures in many countries. Asunción registered -1 °C (31 °F), Buenos Aires (Ezeiza Airport) peaked at around -3 °C (27 °F), and in Brazil many cities recorded the lowest temperatures in many years. Curitiba had incredible 12 days of freezing temperatures, peaking at -4 °C (26 °F), and some areas of the southern states of Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina reached -11 °C (14 °F). It also snowed heavily in these states. The cold front even reached the Amazon, with some cities in the southern part of the forest nearing temperatures of 10 °C (50 °F).

21st-century cold waves (2001–present)

[edit]

2002

  • 2002 Cold wave in Greece January 4 - the first significant snowfall of 21st century in Athens, Greece occurred on January 4, lasted three days and caused major disruption to the city. The dense snowfall during midnight of January 5 left at least 15 cm of snow on the ground in downtown Athens, the northern suburbs of Athens received more than 50 cm.[46]

2004–2005

  • 2004 January cold outbreak, Northeast United States – New England was close to a record month when frequent Arctic fronts caused unusually cold weather. Boston had its coldest January since 1893 (19.7 °F, −6.8 °C), when it averaged 20.7 °F (−6.3 °C), and its lowest mean maximum at 27.2 °F (−2.7 °C). Virginia Beach had an unusually long period of below freezing weather. Some areas of northern New York saw 150 inches (3.81 m) of snow in a month. Many parts of the western and midwestern area of the country seen the effect as well.
  • 2004 February cold wave in Greece on February 12 – coldest air mass to hit Greece in 21st century till today – a very cold air mass from the North Pole was pulled in eastern Europe because of a high-pressure system in west Scandinavia extended to south Europe, resulting in a low-pressure system in the Balkans. The cold snap finally moved south hitting Greece and caused ' record low temperatures, frozen rain phenomenon, thundersnow in Athens, snowfall that blanketed Crete island, snow that fell even in the most southern place of Greece in Gavdos Island. During midnight of February 13 temperature in Athens dropped so fast that resulted in a frozen rain that ice- capped all trees, followed by a rare thundersnow phenomenon dropping 25 cm of snow in central Athens and more than 50 cm in eastern suburbs. In the morning of February 13 was recorded the lowest temperature of 21st century in the center of Athens till today of -5 °C(23 °F) degrees(some meteorological stations east of downtown on higher altitude recorded -7 °C(19,4 °F) ) resulting in water supply disruption and residents had to activate boilers and water heaters in order to make the water running again.[47]
  • 2004–2005 Southern Europe cold wave – All areas of Southern Europe saw an unusually hard winter. This cold front caused snow in Algeria, which is extremely unusual. The south of Spain and Morocco also recorded freezing temperatures, and record freezing temperatures were observed in the north of Portugal and Spain.[citation needed]

2005–2006

  • 2005–06 European cold wave – Eastern Europe and Russia saw a very cold winter. Some of them saw their coldest on record or since the 1970s. Snow was in abundance in unusual places, such as in southern Spain and Northern Africa. All the winter months that season saw temperatures well below average across the continent.

2007

  • 2007 Northern Hemisphere cold wave – All of Canada and most of the United States underwent a freeze after a two-week warming that took place in late March and early April. Crops froze, wind picked up, and snow drizzled much of the United States. Some parts of Europe also experienced unusual cold winter-like temperatures, during that time.
  • July 2007 Argentine winter storm – An interaction with an area of low pressure systems across Argentina during July 6, 7 and 8 of 2007, and the entry of a massive polar cold snap resulted in severe snowfalls and blizzards, and recorded temperatures below −32 °C (−26 °F). The cold snap advanced from the south towards the central zone of the country, continuing its displacement towards the north during Saturday, July 7. On Monday, July 9, the simultaneous presence of very cold air, gave place to the occurrence of snowfalls. This phenomenon left at least 23 people dead.[48][49]

2008

  • 2008 Alaska cold wave – In early February, Alaska experienced the coldest temperatures for eight years, with Fairbanks nearing −50 °F (−45.6 °C) and Chicken, Alaska, bottoming out at −72 °F (−57.8 °C), a mere eight °F (4.4 °C) away from the record of −80 °F (−62.2 °C). The first half of January also brought unusual cold weather and heavy snow to widespread regions of China and the Middle East, snowfall was present in Baghdad for the first time since the 1910s.[50]
  • 2008 Greece cold wave February 16 - most significant cold wave that lasted three days after 2002 - On February 14 a massive high pressure system between Greenland and Scandinavia extended from Arctic Ocean to west Mediterranean accompanied by a massive low pressure system in Siberia resulting in a cold air mass in eastern Europe reaching Greece on February 16. The cold air that moved over Aegean sea caused lake-effect snow dropping more than 40 cm of snow in Athens in the Chaidari district. In addition, it caused major disruption to the city and numerous flights were cancelled due to bad weather conditions.[51]

2009–2010

  • Early 2009 European Cold Wave – Early January gave most of Europe, especially in central and south very cold temperatures. Some places like Germany, France, Italy, Romania and Spain had record cold temperatures well below 0 °C (32 °F). Most of the places were covered in snow and ice which caused school closings and airport delays. Large cities like Paris, Madrid, Berlin and even Marseille saw very cold temperatures with much snow and ice in Northern Italy, most of Germany, in northern Portugal and even along the coasts of the Mediterranean. In early February another cold front brought heavy snowfall to much of Western Europe with the heaviest snow falling in France, Northern Italy, the Low Countries and the United Kingdom, where parts of Southern England had seen the worst snowfall in over eighteen years causing widespread travel disruption particularly around London.
  • February 2009 Great Britain and Ireland snowfall – The February 2009 Great Britain and Ireland snowfall was a prolonged period of snowfall that began on 1 February 2009. Some areas experienced their largest snowfall levels in 18 years.[52] Snow fell over much of Western Europe.[53] The United Kingdom's Met Office and Ireland's Met Éireann issued severe weather warnings in anticipation of the snowfall. More than 30 centimetres (12 in) of snow fell on parts of the North Downs and over 20 centimetres (8 in) in parts of the London area.[54] Such snow accumulation is uncommon in London.[55] On the morning of 6 February the majority of Great Britain and Ireland had snow cover, with the area surrounding the Bristol Channel (South Wales (Cardiff area) and South West England (Bristol area)) being most affected – 55 centimetres (22 in) had settled overnight around Okehampton, Devon, South West England with similar depths in South Wales. In Ireland the highest totals were recorded around East Kildare and Wicklow County's were up to 11 inches (28 cm) fell around Naas, County Kildare and even more along the Wicklow Mountains. The last time such widespread snowfall affected Britain was in February 1991.[56] On the 2nd a total of 32 centimetres (13 in) had fallen in Leatherhead, Surrey just south of the M25. Also 30 centimetres (12 in) had fallen over the South Downs and 26 centimetres (10 in) in higher areas of Brighton.
  • 2009–10 European cold wave – At least ninety were confirmed dead after record low temperatures and heavy snowfall across Europe causes travel disruption to much of the continent including the British Isles, France, the Low Countries, Germany, Austria, Italy, Poland, the Baltic States, the Balkans, Ukraine and Russia. It was the coldest winter and longest cold spell for thirty years in the United Kingdom, whilst temperatures in the Italian Alpine peaks reached low to an extreme of −47 °C (−52.6 °F).

  • The first snowfall began on 17 December 2009, before a respite over the Christmas period.[57] The most severe snowy weather began on 5 January in North West England and west Scotland with temperatures hitting a low of −17.6 °C (0.3 °F) in Greater Manchester, England.[58] The snow spread to Southern England on 6 January and by 7 January the United Kingdom was blanketed in snow,[57] which was captured by NASA's Terra satellite.[59] The thaw came a week later, as temperatures started to increase.[57] The winter weather brought widespread transport disruption, school closures, power failures, the postponement of sporting events and 25 deaths. A low of −22.3 °C (−8.1 °F) was recorded in Altnaharra, Scotland on 8 January 2010. Overall it was the coldest winter since 1978–79, with a mean temperature of 1.5 °C (34.7 °F).
  • Winter of 2009–10 in Great Britain and Ireland – The winter of 2009–10 in the United Kingdom (also called The Big Freeze by British media) was a meteorological event that started on 16 December 2009, as part of the severe winter weather in Europe. January 2010 was provisionally the coldest January since 1987 across the country.[60] A persistent pattern of cold northerly and easterly winds brought cold, moist air to the United Kingdom with many snow showers, fronts and polar lows bringing snowy weather with it.
  • A cold wave affected much of the Deep South in the United States and Florida in January and February 2010.

2010–2011

  • Winter of 2010–11 in Great Britain and Ireland – This winter was referred to as The Big Freeze by national media in both United Kingdom and Ireland and it was the coldest winter in Britain for 31 years with an average temperature of 1.51 °C (34.72 °F). The UK had its second-coldest December on record, only behind December 1890, and is considered the coldest on record outside of England.
  • 2011 New Zealand snowstorms- Caused by Antarctic storms moving upward, the whole country was affected briefly in July 2011, only for it to return even stronger in August for a prolonged period of time. Te Waipounamu/ The South Island was the hardest hit, although the generally more mild Te Ika-a-Maui/ The North Island was also affected to a large extent. Widespread and heavy snow fell in Wellington for the first time in twenty years, and in Auckland the first time since the 1930s. Despite this, the Kiwis, especially children, weren't disrupted by the snowstorms.[61][62]

2012

  • Early 2012 European cold wave – As of February 11, 2012, at least 590 people died during a cold snap with temperatures falling below −35 °C (−31 °F) in some regions.[63] In Ukraine, over 100 deaths were attributed to the cold.[64]

2013

  • United Kingdom March–April 2013 – The UK Spring 2013 cold wave was a prolonged spell of cold weather which brought with it very heavy snowfalls, the worst in March for 30 years and since 1947 in some places. There was also some very cold temperatures with England (CET) having its coldest March since 1883 with a mean monthly temperature of 2.7 °C (36.9 °F). This meant that March was colder than all three winter months December 2012, January and February 2013.

  • Spring 2013 North American cold wave – Although the core winter of 2012–13 was fairly mild, both March and April were unusually cold across the Midwest, resulting in sharp temperature contrasts from March 2012 to March 2013 all over the United States and Canada. This late cold wave was unexpected because February and March 2013 were both forecasted to be even milder and more springlike than February and March 2012, but instead turned out with a near-average February and an unusually cold March. This same cold wave extended well into the month of April, as four notable winter storms impacted much of the northern United States, especially across Minnesota and the Dakotas. Minnesota experienced a rare May snowstorm as a result of this cold wave.
  • In July 2013, South America experienced the most intense cold wave in 13 years. Some coastal areas of Argentina and Uruguay had multiple days of nearly freezing temperatures, and snow fell throughout Southern Brazil, even being registered in Curitiba for the first time since 1988.
  • 2013 Middle East cold snap - Cyprus, Egypt, Israel, West Bank, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria.

2013-2014

  • December 2013 North American cold wave – On December 1, the weakening of the polar vortex resulted in the jet stream shifting southward, which allowed abnormally cold temperatures to intrude the Central United States. On December 6, a daily record snowfall of 0.1 inches (2.5 mm) was set in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, breaking the old record of trace amounts of snow, set in 1950.[65][66] The cold wave continued into December 10, before the temperatures returned to a more stable range.
  • Early 2014 North American cold wave – On January 2–11, cold arctic air initially associated with a nor'easter invaded the central and eastern United States and Canada, east of the Rockies. Temperatures were even colder than the North Pole and the South Pole in many regions in the Upper Midwest and Canada. Temperatures reached as cold as −37 °F (−38 °C), and did not even get out of the negative double-digit temps in many places, including Chicago. The cold wave extended for a few more months, bringing a continuous pattern of record-low temperatures to most of the Central and upper eastern United States, before the pattern finally ended in early April.
  • 2014-2015
  • November 2014 North American cold wave – Between November 8 and November 23, a polar vortex similar to earlier in 2014 has a temporary comeback, delivering the 2014–15 winter season's first three significant winter storms in the United States. Snowfall records were confirmed all over the Midwest and the Northeast, especially around the Great Lakes. Buffalo, New York, was among the hardest hit in the unseasonably wintry November.
  • February 2015 North American cold wave – During the second half of February 2015, temperature records were broken in both sides of the spectrum. Extreme warm records were broken in the western half of the United States and extreme cold records were broken in the eastern half. In addition to the extreme cold wave at its most brutal in the Great Lakes, Mid-Atlantic, and New England, snowfall was reported as far south as Tupelo, Mississippi; Huntsville, Alabama; and Shreveport, Louisiana. The cold wave became widespread and all the remaining mild conditions from the west were pushed into northern Mexico. The cold wave even extended well into early March, with a part of every U.S. state except Florida reporting a snow cover by March 1, 2015.

2016

2017

  • April 2017 - During the same year, low temperatures were recorded in Sarajevo from an unusual snowfall that hit the city disrupting the traffic since the 2012 cold wave.[68]
  • January 2017 European cold wave – A cold wave hit Central and East Europe on January 5. The lowest temperature was −45.4 °C (−49.7 °F) degrees.[69] The cold caused at least 60 deaths. There was also massive snowfall.

2017–2018

  • Cold wave of November 9–12, 2017. Record lows were broken from Minneapolis to Washington, D.C., as Arctic air swept through the areas.[citation needed]
  • Cold wave starting late December 2017 (December 24 respectively), North America. A persistent wave of temperature extremes, including a cold wave, took place in Canada and the northeastern and central areas of the United States from Northern Canada to Mississippi, with temperatures in much of Canada of around −29 °C (−20 °F) and as low as −39 °C (−38 °F) in New York state, and as high as 21 °C (70 °F) and 31 °C (88 °F) in Sandberg and Los Angeles, respectively, in California.[70]

2018

  • Late February and early–mid March 2018, Europe. Easterly winds created bitter conditions, along with snow, twice during early spring 2018. Storm Emma, which affected southern areas of Great Britain, brought up to 50 centimetres (20 in) of snow.[71] Overall, 93 people across Europe died; 27 deaths occurred in Poland and 17 in the UK.
  • Around early December 2018, some cold waves hit Central Russia and Kazakhstan, bringing temperatures several degrees down from the average. Big cities like Novosibirsk, Krasnoyarsk, Omsk, Irkutsk, and Barnaul had experienced temperatures of -10 C or lower.[72][73][74][75][76][77] The cold wave dissipated in mid-December, but returned close to Christmas, impacting Central Russia and Kazakhstan strongly again, before finally dissipating around New Year's Eve. The lowest temperature, −52.5 °C (−62.5 °F) happened in Yerbogachen on Christmas.[78]

2019

  • In late January, an extreme cold wave hit Canada and the midwest of the United States, bringing temperatures below −30.0 °C (−22.0 °F), with all-time record lows set in several cities.[79] New York City had a low temperature of 2 °F (-16 °C), the coldest reading in Central Park since February 14, 2016, when the mercury dropped to -1 °F (-18 °C), the coldest sub-zero reading in New York City since January 19, 1994.[80]
  • February 2019: Brought temperatures 10~15 degrees lower than the February average lows, and temperatures of −40 °C (−40 °F) degrees to many parts of Siberia again. Novosibirsk, the largest city in Asian Russia, lowered to −40.1 °C (−40.2 °F) on 2 February, just a fraction of a degree shy to its previous record in 1977.[81] Krasnoyarsk also lowered to −41.3 °C (−42.3 °F) on 4 February, missing just 0.3 °C to its record in 2001.[82] Irkutsk Oblast had also recorded very low temperatures, with Irkutsk hitting −37.7 °C (−35.9 °F) on 6 February, beating its previous record of 6 February,[83] Bratsk has seen temperatures below −41.5 °C (−42.7 °F) on February 5, which is sometimes colder than cities like Yakutsk. 7 and 8 February was even more brutal, with Omsk as low as −39.0 °C (−38.2 °F),[84] and a merciless record low −41.9 °C (−43.4 °F) in Novokuznetsk, just 0.3 °C short of the record low in 1969.[85] Lowest temperature in the cold wave of −53.6 °C (−64.5 °F) was recorded in Vanavara[86] The cold wave also lightly affected the Russian Far East and some parts North America. California experienced an unusually wet and cold February, where Los Angeles experienced its coldest February since 1962.[87]
  • November 2019: North American cold wave
  • November 2019: Turkish cold wave

2020

2021

  • January 2021: Severe cold wave hit many regions in Eurasia, especially in the Iberian Peninsula, Central Asia, South Asia, East Asia and Southeast Asia with some of the lowest temperatures in many years. In Spain, Clot del Tuc de la Llança in Catalonia in the Spanish Pyrenees recorded −34.1 °C on January 6. It was not only the new national lowest temperature record in Spain, 2 °C lower than the previous record in 1956, but also the lowest temperature in the whole Iberian Peninsula ever recorded. On 9 January another new record was attained with -35.6 °C in Vega de Liordes, in the Cantabrian mountains of Spain. The cold wave was concurrent with a historic snowstorm which covered Madrid under 50 to 60 cm of snow, the first time since 1971. Novosibirsk reached a low of -41 °C. Beijing recorded a low of -19.6 °C which was the coldest since 1966. Seoul also recorded -18.6 °C in January 8 which was the tie record with 2001 and the coldest since 1986. Over 200 cm of snow fell in western Japan along the Japan Sea coast.
  • February 2021: Turkish cold wave
  • February 2021: February 2021 North American cold wave
  • May 2021: Sydney CBD recorded its coldest stretch of May days in 54 years due to a polar blast that swept across Australia's southeast, which kept the temperatures below 9 °C (48 °F) in the early mornings for five consecutive nights, in addition to the inland suburbs of Sydney dipping down to 1 °C (34 °F) in Camden and 5 °C (41 °F) in Sydney Olympic Park.[89]
  • June 2021, Sydney CBD had its coldest day since 1984 and the coldest June day since 1899, where it reached a maximum of just 10.3 °C (50.5 °F). Bankstown, a western suburb, only reached 9.7 °C (49.5 °F), its coldest day in 50 years, with nearby suburbs registering a similar temperature.[90] These unusually cold maximums were caused by a cut-off low.[91]

2022


2023


2024

  • January 2024: Mid-January 2024 North American Cold Wave - Freezing temperatures affected campaign events leading up to the Iowa Caucuses on January 15, and could affect turnout in the first contest in the 2024 presidential primaries and caucuses.[93] In addition, the cold temperatures resulted in the 4th coldest NFL game on record between the Kansas City Chiefs and Miami Dolphins, with kickoff temperature being −4 °F (−20 °C).[94] 15 people were hospitalized due to the cold temperatures during the game.[95] Wind chills following the storm reached as low as −60 °F (−51 °C) in Montana, and wind chills were still −9 °F (−23 °C) as far south as Dallas on January 14.[96] On January 13, Dillon, Montana reached an all time record low of −42 °F (−41 °C), while Bozeman, Montana recorded their second coldest temperature at −45 °F (−43 °C).[97] That same day, Dickinson, North Dakota reached a −70 °F (−57 °C) wind chill, their coldest since the wind chill formula was updated in 2001, and a −33 °F (−36 °C) air temperature, a daily record and their coldest temperature since 1990.[98] On January 16, Houston dropped to a daily record low of 19 °F (−7 °C).[99]

See also

[edit]

References

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