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State of the Climate
Snow & Ice
January 2006

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

National Climatic Data Center


Use the form below to access monthly reports.

« December 2005
Snow Report
February 2006 »
Snow Report


daily animation of Northern Hemisphere snow cover from the month
Northern Hemisphere Animation Loop
daily animation of U.S.snow cover from the month
National Animation Loop

The two satellite-derived animations above show the daily snow cover across the Northern Hemisphere (left map) and North America (right map) throughout January 2006. By clicking on the images, the change in sea-ice extent across parts of the Arctic (especially the Labrador Sea) can be seen through the month as well as several significant snowfall events across the U.S. and Europe. Exceptional warmth across much of the North American continent is reflected in a lack of snow cover for parts of the U.S. and lack of lake-ice across the Great Lakes, while colder than average temperatures led to snowier conditions over parts of Europe and western Asia. For the Arctic, the sea-ice extent was the lowest on record extending back to 1979.

More information on significant winter weather and other hazards can be found on NCDC's Hazards page.

Map of monthly snow pack percent of average
larger image

Image courtesy of the
USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service

The map to the left depicts percent of average snowpack in the West and Alaska as of February 1st. The snowpack is less than 50% of average across much of the Southwest causing rising concern over spring water supply, which primarily results from melting snow. Abundant snowfall accumulated in parts of Oregon and southern Idaho as Pacific storms impacted the region during December and January. More information on January severe winter weather can also be found on NCDC's Hazards page. Alaska had below average snowpack, partly as a result of warmer-than-average temperatures across the state during December and drier than average conditions in January.

Map of monthly snow pack percent of average
larger image

The map to the right depicts January sea-ice extent (in millions of square kilometers) across the Northern Hemisphere. For the past 2 years, January extent has been the lowest on record and is consistent with a general decreasing trend. For January 2006, sea-ice covered approximately 16.6 million sq km - an anomaly of 1.2 million sq km below the long-term (1979-2000) mean, reflecting the above average warmth across the region for the month.


Questions?

For questions on technical or scientific content of this report, please contact:

Jake Crouch:
Jake.Crouch@noaa.gov

For general climate monitoring questions, please contact:

CMB.Contact@noaa.gov

For climate data orders, please contact the National Climatic Data Center's Climate Services and Monitoring Division:

NCDC.Orders@noaa.gov

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