Late winter 'heatwave' hits the U.S. in February

Typography

It has been warm this winter for much of the country. But even with that said, temperatures recorded during a four-day period in late February 2017 across the central and eastern United States were extraordinary for the end of meteorological winter—December through February.

It has been warm this winter for much of the country. But even with that said, temperatures recorded during a four-day period in late February 2017 across the central and eastern United States were extraordinary for the end of meteorological winter—December through February.

The record-breaking heat started in the Midwest on February 22 before spreading east over the next several days. In particular, high temperatures on February 24 were remarkably warm for the end of February. The map at right shows the daytime high temperature across the contiguous United States on February 24, 2017, using data from NOAA’s Real-Time Mesoscale Analysis (RTMA). A broad swath of the eastern United States observed temperatures that reached into the 70°Fs, a late spring-like temperature. In parts of the South, temperatures were downright summer-ish. Meanwhile, temperatures across the West were markedly cooler.  

February 24 may have been the peak of the late February warm-up, but the heat was making news for days prior. On February 22, Milwaukee hit 71°F, breaking its previous winter (December-February) record by two degrees.  On Thursday, February 23, as the heat shifted east, Burlington, VT broke its all-time February record when the high temperature reached 62°F. This record lasted 48 hours; by Saturday, February 25, the high temperature was an astounding 71°F. The record-setting crossed borders when Toronto reached 63°F, a new all-time February record (177 years of record).

 

Continue reading at NOAA.

Photo via NOAA.