The Presidents' Day Snowstorm of 18–19 February 1979: A Subsynoptic-Scale Event

Abstract On 18–19 February 1979 a major east coast cyclone deposited a record-breaking snowfall on the Middle Atlantic States. The storm is noteworthy because of the failure of the operational prediction models to signal the intensity of the event. The life cycle of the cyclone is reviewed with emphasis on the synoptic and mesoscale features and their possible linkage. Prior to cyclogenesis the synoptic pattern features a massive cold anticyclone near the Great Lakes with a broad baroclinic zone extending from Texas eastward to the Atlantic coast. A region of enhanced lower tropospheric baroclinicity develops along the Carolina coastal strip in response to significant oceanic sensible and latent heat fluxes which warm, moisten and destabilize the boundary layer. Cyclogenesis is initiated along the coastal front as the result of lower tropospheric warm advection. The importance of the coastal front is that it effectively steers the cyclone north-northeastward parallel to the coast such that it eventually a...