'Thundersnow' pounds Buffalo city

0 Comment(s)Print E-mail Agencies via Shanghai Daily, November 20, 2014
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A massive early season snowstorm pounded the Buffalo city area in western New York state overnight on Tuesday, dumping record snowfalls, trapping people in cars and homes and killing five people, US authorities said.

Even in a city famous for blizzards that roar off Lake Erie shared with Canada, this one stunned Buffalo locals. It even featured the unusual phenomenon of "thundersnow" — in which snow falls instead of rain during a storm. Another forecaster said he was at a loss of words to describe it.

Many areas south of Buffalo, which is near Niagara Falls, were socked with up to 1.8 meters in less than 24 hours. The snowfall was expected to continue.

"Some parts of our county are going to receive a year's worth of snowfall in three days," Erie county executive Mark Poloncarz told local media.

Five deaths were tied to the storm, the latest a 46-year-old man found in his car buried under about 4.6 meters of snow. Three people died from apparent heart attacks while shoveling snow, and another while pushing a trapped car.

The blizzard was weirdly localized.

While 1.5 meters of snow was reported at a site just southeast of the town of Lancaster, only 10 kilometers to the northwest just 10 centimeters fell at Buffalo Niagara International Airport, the Buffalo News newspaper said.

There's no meteorological term for the phenomenon that generated a wall of clouds and churned out such a stunning amount of snow, said Dave Zaff of the National Weather Service in Buffalo, the paper said.

"Whiteout to blue sky in a very, very short distance," he said.

A women's university basketball team spent more than 24 hours trapped in a bus on a highway because of the snow, before being rescued.

"We've been sitting here so long that we're completely snowed in. There's four feet of snow around the bus.

"We're running low on water so we've been taking cups and putting snow in them and letting them melt," head coach Kendra Faustin of Niagara University told the radio station WKBW.

Sheriffs' deputies later delivered juice, soda and snacks to the women. They were finally rescued around 4am on Wednesday, the radio station said.

A driving ban was put into effect.

Officials also urged older residents not to try to shovel the heavy white stuff.

Highway crews were in a dilemma; snow plows generally cannot operate effectively with snowfalls over one meter.

Some first responders carried gurneys down snowed-in streets because ambulances could not get through.

Other paramedics used snowmobiles on rescue calls, since the streets were impassible.

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