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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:December_1989_United_States_cold_wave
rdfs:label
December 1989 United States cold wave
rdfs:comment
The December 1989 United States cold wave was a series of cold waves into the central and eastern United States from mid-December 1989 through Christmas. On December 21-23, a massive high pressure area pushed many areas into record lows. On the morning of the 22nd, Scottsbluff, Nebraska, experienced -42 °F. The next morning, the front pushed temperatures in Houston down into the single digits. On the 24th and 25th, Miami experienced freezing temperatures and Key West tied its December low of 44 °F. The wave extended all the way into Mexico's Lower Rio Grande Valley, resulting in tens of millions of dollars in damage to the agricultural sector. The December cold wave was actually the second of the year, after a February cold wave had extended into Texas.
dbp:name
December 1989 United States cold wave
foaf:depiction
n14:Atmosphere_pressure_map_on_December_22,_1989_-_cold_wave.jpg n14:NOLASnow1989ATaxi.jpg n14:Jacksonville_Snow_2.jpg
dcterms:subject
dbc:1989_natural_disasters_in_the_United_States dbc:1989_in_North_America dbc:1989_natural_disasters dbc:Cold_waves_in_the_United_States dbc:1989_meteorology
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dbt:Commonscat dbt:Reflist dbt:Infobox_storm dbt:Cold_wave dbt:United_States_winter_storms
dbo:thumbnail
n14:Atmosphere_pressure_map_on_December_22,_1989_-_cold_wave.jpg?width=300
dbp:affected
United States
dbp:dissipated
December 1989
dbp:caption
0001-12-22
dbp:formed
December 1989
dbp:type
dbr:Cold_wave
dbo:abstract
The December 1989 United States cold wave was a series of cold waves into the central and eastern United States from mid-December 1989 through Christmas. On December 21-23, a massive high pressure area pushed many areas into record lows. On the morning of the 22nd, Scottsbluff, Nebraska, experienced -42 °F. The next morning, the front pushed temperatures in Houston down into the single digits. On the 24th and 25th, Miami experienced freezing temperatures and Key West tied its December low of 44 °F. The wave extended all the way into Mexico's Lower Rio Grande Valley, resulting in tens of millions of dollars in damage to the agricultural sector. The December cold wave was actually the second of the year, after a February cold wave had extended into Texas. An area of low pressure moving northeast from Florida interacted with the cold front to create the Christmas Coastal Snowstorm on December 22-24, the largest snowstorm ever in the southeast United States. All-time snow records were broken in Wilmington, North Carolina (15.3 inches), Cape Hatteras (13.3 inches), Charleston, South Carolina (8 inches), and Savannah, Georgia (3.6 inches). Snow was measured in Jacksonville and Tallahassee, and snow flurries fell as far south as Tampa and Sarasota.
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7296
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wikipedia-en:December_1989_United_States_cold_wave