A further, quite graphic illustration of the effects of the negative phase of the oscillation occurred in February 2010. In that month, the Arctic oscillation reached its most negative monthly mean value at about −4.266, in the entire post-1950 era (the period of accurate record-keeping). That month was characterized by three separate historic snowstorms in the
mid-Atlantic region of the United States. The
first storm precipitated on
Baltimore, Maryland on February 5–6, and a
second storm precipitated on February 9–10. In New York City, a
separate storm deposited on February 25–26. Another snowstorm swept
Catalonia as well as neighbouring French departments (
Languedoc-Roussillon,
Midi-Pyrenées) on March 8, depositing 60 cm of snow in
Girona. This kind of snowstorm activity is considered to be highly anomalous, and as extreme as the negative Arctic oscillation value itself. These negative values of the AO during 2010 and following into the next winter allowed colder air to penetrate much further south than usual into sub-tropical South Florida which brought record breaking low temperatures and months registered in many locations and the coolest average monthly minimum temperatures for February, March and December that year in the tropical beach getaway of
Cancún, up to over 4C below the climate period averages. The greatest negative value for the Arctic oscillation since 1950 in January was −3.767 in 1977, which coincided with the coldest mean January temperature in New York City, Washington, D.C., Baltimore, and many other mid-Atlantic locations in that span of time, although the January Arctic oscillation has been negative only 60.6% of the time between 1950 and 2010, nine of the ten coldest Januarys in New York City since 1950 have coincided with negative Arctic oscillations. == See also ==