Snow storm across the Upper Midwest - related image preview

337 x 253
27 KB - JPEG

Snow storm across the Upper Midwest - related image preview

1013 x 760
281 KB - JPEG

Snow storm across the Upper Midwest - related image preview

2025 x 1519
826 KB - JPEG

Snow storm across the Upper Midwest - related image preview

4050 x 3038
3 MB - JPEG

Snow storm across the Upper Midwest

The first snow storm of 2006 dumped several inches of snow across a wide swath of the Midwest, with snowfall totals from four to five inches recorded in Chicago to as much as a foot just north of the city. Beyond the traffic accidents caused by icy roads, the storm was not a remarkable one. It did, however, leave a clear track across the Midwest and the Great Lakes region. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite captured this image of the storm on January 21, 2006, a day after the snow fell. The deep blue waters of Lakes Michigan, left, and Huron, right, stand out starkly against the background of white. Remarkably, the lakes show no sign of freezing. At this time in 2005, the shores of both lakes were fringed with ice. January 2006 has been warmer than average across the United States. Average weekly temperatures in the area shown in this image have ranged from 5 degrees Celsius above average to more than 8.3 degrees Celsius above average, according to the National Climate Data Center.


Jesse Allen

Published January 30, 2006
Data acquired January 21, 2006

Source:
Terra > MODIS
Collections:
MODIS Image of the Day
Visible Earth