Cold wave of 1978
The cold wave of 1978 was a weather event that occurred in the Eastern United States. Beginning in December 1977 and lasting until March, it produced one of the coldest winters on record in all states east of the Rocky Mountains, except Maine.
Timeline
December
During December 1977, a cold wave started around the eastern United States. This cold wave heavily hit Michigan and Ohio, whose average winter temperature was to be the second lowest in recorded history, rivaled only by an even colder wave that hit the previous winter.January
Like most cold waves of the 1970s, temperatures in January dropped to extreme lows. Wind chills across the plains fell to between. Severe cold pounded from the Plains states to the Eastern seaboard, where frequent frontal storms caused record snowfall and extreme blizzards, which caused some areas to declare a state of emergency. Schools and business were closed when pipelines froze over, and driving conditions were severe. Blowing snow meant that roads could not be cleared, and hundreds of automobile accidents were caused by the blizzard conditions. Tanks had to be used to remove stranded vehicles on some highways.Insulation by the very heavy northeastern snow led to severe damage to major roads by potholes, as liquid water was able to erode the tar more effectively.