November 2014 North American cold wave
November 2014 North American cold wave
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November 2014 North American cold wave

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November 2014 North American cold wave

The November 2014 North American cold wave was an extreme weather event that occurred across most of Canada and the contiguous United States, including parts of the Western United States up to western California. One of the first events of the winter, the cold wave was caused by the northward movement of an extremely powerful bomb cyclone associated with Typhoon Nuri's remnant, which shifted the jet stream far northward, creating an omega block pattern. This allowed a piece of the polar vortex to advance southward into the Central and Eastern United States, bringing record-cold temperatures to much of the region. In contrast, Alaska experienced above-average temperatures.

This was the worst cold wave that the North American region had experienced since an earlier cold wave in early 2014. The cold wave was expected to last for a few weeks, extending at least until American Thanksgiving. Although the Omega Block broke down on November 20, due to a powerful storm moving into the Gulf of Alaska, frigid conditions continued to persist across much of the United States. There was also concern among some meteorologists that another cold wave or abnormally cold trend might persist throughout the winter of 2014–15, the chances of which were "above average." On November 23, a warming trend primarily in the Eastern United States brought an end to the cold wave; however, below-average temperatures were forecast to return to the Midwest by November 24. Despite the development of a second cold wave, it ended on December 6, when a ridge of high pressure brought above-average temperatures to the region, especially in the Central United States.

On November 8, the northward movement of a bomb cyclone associated with Typhoon Nuri's remnants shifted the jet stream far to the north, creating an omega block pattern, which allowed a fragment of the polar vortex to descend from Arctic region into lower Canada and the Eastern United States, affecting up to 200 million people with colder-than-normal temperatures and early snowstorms. Although the Omega block broke down on November 20, a powerful storm brought more frigid temperatures. The wave ended on December 6 when an area of high pressure moved in.

Some meteorologists also predicted that the winter of 2014–15 would be abnormally cold across the Eastern United States (though on October 16 the NOAA predicted warmer than average winter temperatures in the Northeast), due to early snowfall in Siberia, and a weak but developing El Niño, which are both factors in erratic jet stream behavior that could lead to an abnormally cold winter. That prediction turned out to be very accurate, and 2014-15 was indeed a very cold winter in the Northeast.

November 18 was the coldest November morning since 1976 with a national average temperature of 19.4 °F (−7.0 °C) and below-freezing temperatures reported in all 50 states. On that date, Joplin set a record low for the entire month of November, at 6 °F (−14 °C). Houston had its earliest fall freeze since 1999, and Kansas City also dipped down to 6 °F (−14 °C). In Boise, a record low of 5 °F (−15 °C) was established. Paducah set a record low of 10 °F (−12 °C), Evansville dipped down to 9 °F (−13 °C), and Cape Girardeau, Missouri got down to 8 °F (−13 °C). Some U.S. locations had temperatures 45 °F (25 °C) below normal. Sub-zero highs were recorded in Montana, Wyoming and Colorado, and sub-freezing highs were recorded as far as Texas.

On November 13, Casper, Wyoming had its lowest temperature ever recorded in November, with a record low of −27 °F (−33 °C), and Denver, Colorado had a low of −14 °F (−26 °C), the second-coldest ever recorded for that month. On November 18, Detroit tied a record of 11 °F (−12 °C), first set in 1880. Cleveland also tied a record low that morning of 10 °F (−12 °C), first set in 1959, and also became the coldest temperature for any date so early in the season in Cleveland since 1959 as well. Jacksonville, Florida reached 24 °F (−4 °C) on November 20, 2014, breaking a record set in 1873.

The cold wave brought an end to the navigation season on the upper Mississippi River, the earliest closing since records began in 1969.

Overall, November 2014 was the 16th coldest November in the contiguous United States, and the coldest since 2000. Alabama and Mississippi saw their 2nd coldest November, and 16 other states had a top ten cold November.

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