WGN-TV Chief Meteorologist Tom Skilling and the WGN Weather Center staff provide daily coverage of weather in the Chicago area.

UNDERSTANDING THE WEATHER: February 2008 Archives

Understanding the Weather: Feb. 26, 2008

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Chicago has a national reputation of being a snowy city, but many U.S. cities routinely receive much more than Chicago's winter average of 39 inches. Here are several cities whose seasonal snow total is at least twice as great as Chicago's:

324" Valdez, Alaska
137" Marquette, Michigan
116" Syracuse, New York
102" Lander, Wyoming
100" Flagstaff, Arizona
99" Juneau, Alaska
98" Muskegon, Michigan
93" Buffalo, New York
92" Rochester, New York
81" Duluth, Minnesota
79" Burlington, Vermont

Understanding the Weather: Feb. 6, 2008

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Chicago snow extremes in February
(1885-2007)

snowiest February ... 27.8" in 1896

biggest February snowstorm ... 13.4" Feb. 6-7, 1895

least snowy February ... 0.0" in 1987 and 1998

Understanding the Weather: Feb. 6, 2008

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Drizzle: Liquid precipitation composed of very small water droplets (0.001 to 0.020 inch in diameter) that appear almost to float while following air currents. Unlike fog, drizzle falls to the ground. It is erroneous to refer to very light rain as drizzle.

Drizzle, fog, mist: All three are composed of tiny water droplets that appear to float in the air. Drizzle droplets are large enough so that they do fall, and therefore drizzle is precipitation. Fog and mist droplets are smaller and do not fall and are not precipitation.

Fog: A visible aggregate of water droplets suspended in the air at ground level. Fog is literally a cloud on the ground. Fog droplets are so tiny that they do not fall through the air, and fog is therefore not considered to be precipitation.

Freezing rain: Rain that falls into a shallow layer of subfreezing air at the ground (usually only several hundred feet deep) and freezes upon impact to form a coating of glaze on exposed objects.

Rain:Liquid precipitation in the form of water drops with diameters greater than 0.020 inch. Drizzle, the only other form of liquid precipitation, consists of droplets 0.020 inch in diameter or smaller.

Sleet: Precipitation in the form of small ice pellets. Sleet forms when raindrops (or largely melted snowflakes), originating in warmer air aloft, fall through a layer of subfreezing air at ground level and then freeze on their way down. Sleet is often referred to as ice pellets in weather observations.

Understanding the Weather: Feb. 4, 2008

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Chicago's snowiest Februarys
1885-2007 snowfall data

27.8" 1896
26.2" 1994
23.7" 1980
22.6" 1900
22.5" 1967

Understanding the Weather: Feb. 2, 2008

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Chicago's biggest February snowstorms
(1885-2007)

13.4" Feb 6-7, 1895
12.8" Feb 18-19, 1908
12.7" Feb 6-7, 1933
12.5" Feb 3-4, 1896
12.2" Feb 3-4, 1901
12.0" Feb 12-13, 1896