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Dr. Jeff Masters' compiled a list of the top snowstorms on record for Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington, and helpfully set this season's storms in bold. From his blog entry:
Top 9 snowstorms on record for Philadelphia:

1. 30.7", Jan 7-8, 1996
2. 28.5", Feb 5-6, 2010 (Snowmageddon)
3. 23.2", Dec 19-20, 2009 (Snowpocalypse)

4. 21.3", Feb 11-12, 1983
5. 21.0", Dec 25-26, 1909
6. 19.4", Apr 3-4, 1915
7. 18.9", Feb 12-14, 1899
8. 16.7", Jan 22-24, 1935
9. 15.1", Feb 28-Mar 1, 1941

The top 10 snowstorms on record for Baltimore:

1. 28.2", Feb 15-18, 2003
2. 26.5", Jan 27-29, 1922
3. 24.8", Feb 5-6, 2010 (Snowmageddon)
4. 22.8", Feb 11-12, 1983
5. 22.5", Jan 7-8, 1996
6. 22.0", Mar 29-30, 1942
7. 21.4", Feb 11-14, 1899
8. 21.0", Dec 19-20, 2009 (Snowpocalypse)
9. 20.0", Feb 18-19, 1979
10. 16.0", Mar 15-18, 1892

The top 10 snowstorms on record for Washington, D.C.:

1. 28.0", Jan 27-28, 1922
2. 20.5", Feb 11-13, 1899
3. 18.7", Feb 18-19, 1979
4. 17.8" Feb 5-6, 2010 (Snowmageddon)
5. 17.1", Jan 6-8, 1996
6. 16.7", Feb 15-18, 2003
7. 16.6", Feb 11-12, 1983
8. 16.4", Dec 19-20, 2009 (Snowpocalypse)
9. 14.4", Feb 15-16, 1958
10. 14.4", Feb 7, 1936
I wonder what this week's storm will be called. At this rate, they're going to run out of cutsey names.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-09 03:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] redfishie.livejournal.com
It's also something about the inaccuracy of the conjunction of words that does it to me - similar when people use the word rape inappropriately, thus lessing its real meaning.

I think it also trips the same annoyance area as when people call Easter - Zombie Jesus day (yeah, it was a vaguelly original phrasing the first time I heard it - the 20th, you're no longer original and coming off more like you're insulting a religion).

I apparently have a sensitivity button on proper word usage, similar to the issues some folks have with grammer.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-09 03:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cerridwynn.livejournal.com
Wow -- I'd never heard Zombie Jesus day. I find that seriously insulting, and i'm not even someone who celebrates that particular holiday/religion!

Also, I totally get what you're saying about devaluing the power of words. That bugs me too. But i guess i could argue that words like Apocalypse and Armageddon are already so devalued by pop culture in general that using them in this way doesn't bother me. For me those words evoke action movie heroes, not a serious catastrophe -- i picture Bruce Willis holding back a giant snowball on it's way to roll into the capitol dome. I think silly words like those cheer people up and help foster a sense of camaraderie -- and really, what's wrong with that*?

I would be much more bothered by "snowtastrophe" actually. That strikes me as a more serious word to devalue.

Anyway, it's interesting! :-)

*Actually, fake TV-generated camaraderie can be really annoying. I get that too. I don't know if this is a case of that or not...

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-09 04:00 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
"I'd never heard Zombie Jesus day. I find that seriously insulting, and i'm not even someone who celebrates that particular holiday/religion!"

Every year around Easter it pops up, especially on some of my friends' LJ posts...and it's played off as something "hip" and "cute", nto serious, etc...similar to the snowpaclypse stuff- when really its going out of its way to insult someone else's religious beliefs.

Someone actually organized a zmobie walk on Easter Sunday in Davis last year, and when folks realized it was not a scheduling accident, quite a few bailed, but others went because of it.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-02-09 06:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] redfishie.livejournal.com
huh- snowtastrophe would bother me less, but I think catastrophe is already an overused word. That's amusing.

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