How the warming Great Lakes could herald a new era of supercharged snowstorms
- A storm in Central Ontario dumped 140 centimetres of snow on Gravenhurst, causing a local state of emergency for over two weeks as crews worked to restore power.
- Climate scientists, including Richard Rood, predict that lake-effect snowstorms will intensify due to climate change.
- Four of the five Great Lakes had warmer average surface temperatures in 2024 than in the past three decades, according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
- Bauer noted the community's support during the storm, saying, 'You could see the community come together.
39 Articles
39 Articles
How the warming Great Lakes could herald a new era of supercharged snowstorms #CDNNews #Canada #OntarioNews #OntNews
Sarah Bauer woke up to a shaking house. She thought maybe an earthquake had struck near her home in Torrance, a village in Ontario’s cottage country. But when she looked outside, she saw a massive tree had collapsed onto her driveway under the weight of rapidly accumulating snowfall, taking down a power line with it. “It was freaky,” she said. The storm that hit parts of central Ontario in late November and early December was the biggest in rece…
Warming Great Lakes could lead to stronger snow storms, climate scientists say – Sky News: The Latest News from the World
Sarah Bauer woke up to a shaking house. She thought maybe an earthquake had struck near her home in Torrance, a village in Ontario’s cottage country. But when she looked outside, she saw a massive tree had collapsed onto her driveway under the weight of rapidly accumulating snowfall, taking down a power line with it. […]
New era of supercharged snowstorms coming to Ontario
Sarah Bauer woke up to a shaking house. She thought maybe an earthquake had struck near her home in Torrance, a village in Ontario’s cottage country. But when she looked outside, she saw a massive tree had collapsed onto her driveway under the weight of rapidly accumulating snowfall, taking down a power line with it. “It was freaky,” she said. The storm that hit parts of central Ontario in late November and early December was the biggest in rece…
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