The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Mount Washington wind chill hits minus-108

- By Timothy Bella

The wind chill at the summit of New Hampshire’s Mount Washington dropped to minus-108 degrees on Friday, marking what meteorolog­ists and climate scientists say is probably the lowest recorded in the history of the United States at a time when the Northeast is getting battered with dangerousl­y cold air.

Videos recorded by the nonprofit Mount Washington Observator­y show how the extreme cold and strong winds of more than 100 mph from the arctic air blast walloped the summit on Friday afternoon — and made the mountain with the tallest peak in the Northeast look like it’s not from Earth. In fact, the eerie scene atop Mount Washington was slightly colder than the average temperatur­e on Mars this week, according to NASA.

The wind chill at Mount Washington, a 6,228-foot peak known for its erratic weather, surpassed the record of minus-102.7 degrees set in 2004. The observator­y forecast winds to blow as high as more than 100 mph sustained on Friday night, with gusts around 128 mph.

The Mount Washington Observator­y tweeted on Friday afternoon that the daily record temperatur­e set in 1963 had already been broken and that temperatur­es were “expected to plunge even lower overnight.” And they did just that, dropping to minus-108, according to the National Weather Service. (The Mount Washington Observator­y clocked the wind chill at minus-109 degrees.)

“The 96 mph winds (gusts to 127 mph) are producing a wind chill of -108 F,” the agency wrote Friday night.

A spokespers­on with the Mount Washington Observator­y did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Saturday morning.

Francis Tarasiewic­z, a meteorolog­ist with the Mount Washington Observator­y, told WMUR in Manchester, N.H., that the record-breaking wind chill capped off “an amazing day, an awe-inspiring day and actually a bit of a frightenin­g moment.” Tarasiewic­z noted how the strong wind, which he described as “a topsyturvy whiplash,” blew the hinge off a door at the observator­y.

The meteorolog­ist, who pleaded with hikers to stay off the trails on Saturday, warned that such extreme wind chills would result in frostbite on exposed skin in less than a minute.

“On some of my observatio­ns, there have been tiny little gaps in my mittens and the spot that was uncovered to the wind felt like a bee stinging my arm continuous­ly,” Tarasiewic­z said.

The National Weather Service said the temperatur­e at Mount Washington dropped as low as minus-46 degrees on Friday night.

“Right now Mount Washington is living up to the reputation of having the worse weather in the world,” the National Weather Service wrote.

The record-breaking wind chill at Mount Washington is part of the dangerous cold air invading the Northeast that has nearly 50 million Americans in 15 states under wind chill alerts into Saturday. Parts of Maine are going through their most extreme wind chills in at least a generation, while New England cities like Boston,

Providence and Bridgeport, Conn., all set record daily lows in temperatur­e, according to the National Weather Service.

Brian Brettschne­ider, a climate scientist based in Alaska, tweeted how the last time the wind chill could have hit at least minus-108 in Mount Washington would have been 138 years ago. Using old climate forms showing the temperatur­e and 24-hour average wind speed, Brettschne­ider estimated that Mount Washington would have seen a minus-108 wind chill on Jan. 22, 1885.

Meteorolog­ists and weather experts from across the country were blown away by the record-breaking wind chill.

“Mount Washington, New Hampshire, has experience­d the most extreme weather on planet Earth today,” wrote Colin McCarthy, a storm watcher based in California.

“Mind-blowing observatio­ns from Mount Washington,” said Lee Goldberg, a meteorolog­ist with WABC in New York.

“Woah!” exclaimed Brandon Orr, a meteorolog­ist with WPLG in Miami.

Others on social media grappled with the extreme weather they were witnessing at Mount Washington.

“[The] Mount Washington summit looks like another planet,” one observer tweeted.

By Saturday morning, there was good news and bad news for Mount Washington, according to the observator­y.

The good news? The wind chill was no longer minus-108 degrees at the summit.

The bad news? The wind chill was a balmy minus-77 degrees.

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