01-17-2009, 03:10 PM
By MARGARET FOSMOE
Tribune Staff Writer
If you stepped outside about 9 a.m. Friday and it seemed a wee bit colder than it had a couple hours earlier, you weren't imagining it.
The lowest air temperature recorded in South Bend during this week's arctic chill fest was minus 19 degrees at 8:55 a.m. Friday at South Bend Regional Airport, tying the previous record for that date set in 1972.
South Bend tied a record low Thursday, too, dropping to minus 15 degrees shortly before midnight. The last Jan. 15 the city reached that temperature was in 1994.
Despite the dangerously cold temperatures, South Bend remained several degrees above its all-time record low of minus 22 degrees recorded Jan. 20, 1943, and Jan. 25, 1897, according to Sam Lashley, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service office in North Webster, Ind.
The coldest cities in the region were Knox and Angola, Ind., which each hit minus 26 degrees late Thursday or early Friday.
And some area wind chills were between minus 30 and minus 40 on those two days, Lashley said.
The area's warm spot was Benton Harbor, which recorded a Thursday-Friday low of a balmy 7 degrees above zero. Benton Harbor was warmed slightly by winds off Lake Michigan, which modified the air temperature, as well as some cloud cover, Lashley said.
Friday's area lows were nowhere near the lowest air temperature ever recorded in the Hoosier state.
That record is minus 36 degrees, set Jan. 19, 1994, in New Whiteland, Ind.
And Michigan's record low? That is minus 51, set Feb. 9, 1934, in Vanderbilt, Mich.
Temperatures are expected to moderate some today, according to the weather service forecast.
It's going to be cloudy, with an inch or two of snow likely, and a high near 23 degrees. Wind chills at times could reach as low as minus 15.
More snow showers are expected tonight and early Sunday, with a low around 16. New snow accumulation could be about 2 inches.
A few more snow showers are expected Sunday, with a high near 22. And even more snow showers could arrive Sunday night, with a low around 11.
Monday ââ¬â Martin Luther King Day ââ¬â will be cloudy, with a high near 22 and a 30 percent chance of snow.
Michiana's low temps
Area cities and towns reached nearly their lowest recorded temperatures ever during the bitter cold snap Thursday and Friday. Here are the unofficial low temperatures recorded between 7 p.m. Thursday and 9 a.m. Friday:
South Bend -19
Elkhart -13
Goshen -21
Middlebury -20
Culver -23
LaPorte -19
Knox -26
Warsaw -18
Sturgis -18
Benton Harbor +7
Source: National Weather Service
http://www.southbendtribune.com/apps/pbc.../1129/News
Tribune Staff Writer
If you stepped outside about 9 a.m. Friday and it seemed a wee bit colder than it had a couple hours earlier, you weren't imagining it.
The lowest air temperature recorded in South Bend during this week's arctic chill fest was minus 19 degrees at 8:55 a.m. Friday at South Bend Regional Airport, tying the previous record for that date set in 1972.
South Bend tied a record low Thursday, too, dropping to minus 15 degrees shortly before midnight. The last Jan. 15 the city reached that temperature was in 1994.
Despite the dangerously cold temperatures, South Bend remained several degrees above its all-time record low of minus 22 degrees recorded Jan. 20, 1943, and Jan. 25, 1897, according to Sam Lashley, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service office in North Webster, Ind.
The coldest cities in the region were Knox and Angola, Ind., which each hit minus 26 degrees late Thursday or early Friday.
And some area wind chills were between minus 30 and minus 40 on those two days, Lashley said.
The area's warm spot was Benton Harbor, which recorded a Thursday-Friday low of a balmy 7 degrees above zero. Benton Harbor was warmed slightly by winds off Lake Michigan, which modified the air temperature, as well as some cloud cover, Lashley said.
Friday's area lows were nowhere near the lowest air temperature ever recorded in the Hoosier state.
That record is minus 36 degrees, set Jan. 19, 1994, in New Whiteland, Ind.
And Michigan's record low? That is minus 51, set Feb. 9, 1934, in Vanderbilt, Mich.
Temperatures are expected to moderate some today, according to the weather service forecast.
It's going to be cloudy, with an inch or two of snow likely, and a high near 23 degrees. Wind chills at times could reach as low as minus 15.
More snow showers are expected tonight and early Sunday, with a low around 16. New snow accumulation could be about 2 inches.
A few more snow showers are expected Sunday, with a high near 22. And even more snow showers could arrive Sunday night, with a low around 11.
Monday ââ¬â Martin Luther King Day ââ¬â will be cloudy, with a high near 22 and a 30 percent chance of snow.
Michiana's low temps
Area cities and towns reached nearly their lowest recorded temperatures ever during the bitter cold snap Thursday and Friday. Here are the unofficial low temperatures recorded between 7 p.m. Thursday and 9 a.m. Friday:
South Bend -19
Elkhart -13
Goshen -21
Middlebury -20
Culver -23
LaPorte -19
Knox -26
Warsaw -18
Sturgis -18
Benton Harbor +7
Source: National Weather Service
http://www.southbendtribune.com/apps/pbc.../1129/News