, after the storm The storm complex was large and widespread, affecting at least 26 US states and much of eastern Canada. It brought in cold air along with heavy precipitation and hurricane-force winds which, ultimately, caused a
blizzard over the affected area; this also included
thundersnow from
Georgia to
Pennsylvania and widespread
whiteout conditions. Snow flurries were seen in the air as far south as
Jacksonville, Florida, and some areas of
central Florida received a trace of snow. The storm severely impacted both ground and air travel. Airports were closed all along the eastern seaboard, and flights were cancelled or diverted, thus stranding many passengers along the way. Every airport from
Halifax, Nova Scotia, to
Tampa, Florida was temporarily closed due to the storm. Highways were also closed or restricted all across the affected region, even in states generally well prepared for snow emergencies. Some affected areas in the Appalachian Mountain region saw of snow, and snowdrifts as high as .
Mount Le Conte, Tennessee recorded 56" and
Mount Mitchell, NC recorded of snowfall. The
volume of the storm's total snowfall was later computed to be , an amount which would weigh (depending on the variable
density of snow) between 5.4 and 27 billion tons. The weight of the record snowfalls
collapsed several factory roofs in the
South; and
snowdrifts on the
windward sides of buildings caused a few
decks with substandard anchoring to fall from homes. Though the storm was forecast to strike the snow-prone
Appalachian Mountains, hundreds of people were nonetheless
rescued from the Appalachians, many caught completely off guard on the
Appalachian Trail or in
cabins and lodges in remote locales. Snowdrifts up to were observed at
Mount Mitchell. Snowfall totals of between were widespread across northwestern North Carolina.
Boone, North Carolina—in a high-elevation area accustomed to heavy snowfalls—was nonetheless caught off-guard by more than of snow and 24 hours of temperatures below . Boone's Appalachian State University closed that week, for the first time in its history. Stranded motorists at
Deep Gap broke into Parkway Elementary School to survive, and National Guard helicopters dropped hay in fields to keep livestock from starving in northern N.C. mountain counties. In Virginia, the LancerLot sports arena in
Vinton collapsed due to the weight of the record snowfall, forcing the
Virginia Lancers of the
ECHL to relocate to nearby
Roanoke and become the
Roanoke Express. Also collapsing were the roofs of a
Lowe's store in
Christiansburg and the
Dedmon Center, at
Radford University. Thousands of travelers were stranded along interstate highways in
Southwest Virginia. Electricity was not restored to many isolated rural areas for up to three weeks, with power outages occurring all over the east. Nearly 60,000 lightning strikes were recorded as the storm swept over the country for a total of 72 hours. As one of the most powerful, complex storms in recent history, this storm was described as the "Storm of the Century" by many of the areas affected. A hockey game hosted by the
Philadelphia Flyers against the
Los Angeles Kings was postponed due to a large window breaking from wind gusts just before the end of the first period.
Gulf of Mexico The
United States Coast Guard dealt with "absolutely incredible, unbelievable" conditions within the Gulf of Mexico. The freighter
Fantastico sank off
Ft. Myers, Florida, and seven of her crew died when a Coast Guard helicopter was forced back to base due to low fuel levels after rescuing three of her crew. The freighter
Miss Beholden ran aground on a
coral reef from
Key West, Florida. Several other smaller vessels sank in the rough seas. In all, the Coast Guard rescued 235 people from over 100 boats across the Gulf of Mexico during the tempest.
Florida estimate of storm surges along Florida's Gulf Coast, March 13, 1993. Besides producing record-low barometric pressure across a swath of the
Southeast and
Mid-Atlantic states, and contributing to one of the nation's biggest snowstorms, the low produced a potent squall line ahead of its
cold front. The
squall line produced a serial
derecho as it moved into Florida and Cuba shortly after midnight on March 13. Straight-line winds gusted above at many locations in Florida as the
squall line moved through. A substantial tree fall was seen statewide from this system. The
supercells in the derecho produced eleven tornadoes. The first tornado was an F2 that touched down in
Chiefland at 04:38 UTC on March 13, damaging several mobile homes and downing trees and power lines. Three people were killed and seven people sustained injures. Around the same time, an F1 tornado was spawned near
Crystal River. After moving eastward into the town, the twister damaged 15 homes, several of them severely. A total of three people were injured. The next tornado was a waterspout that moved ashore over
Treasure Island around 05:00 UTC. Rated F0, the tornado deroofed one home, damaged several others, and impacted a few boats. Around 05:04 UTC, an F0 tornado was reported in
New Port Richey, damaging several homes and injuring 11 people. About 16 minutes later, an F2 tornado formed to the southwest of
Ocala. Many trees fell and several storage buildings and a warehouse suffered extensive damage, while one hangar was destroyed and two others received major damage at the
Ocala International Airport. At 05:20 UTC, approximately the same time as the Ocala tornado, another twister – rated F1 – touched down near
LaCrosse. Several trees and power lines were downed and a few homes were destroyed, one from a propane explosion. One person was killed and four others received injuries. About 10 minutes later, another F2 twister was spawned near
Howey-in-the-Hills. It moved through
Mount Dora, destroying 13 homes, substantially damaging 80 homes, and inflicting minor damage on 266 homes. One person, a 5-month-old baby, was killed, while two others were injured. Storm surges in those areas reached up to , More people died from drowning in this storm than during
Hurricanes Hugo and
Andrew combined. Overall, the storm's surge, winds, and tornadoes damaged or destroyed 18,000 homes. A total of 47 people died in Florida due to this storm. The squall line finally moved out of Cuba near sunrise, leaving 10 deaths and US$1 billion in damage on the island.
North Atlantic The cargo ship
Gold Bond Conveyor en route from Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada to Tampa, Florida foundered in the Atlantic Ocean SE of Sable Island, Nova Scotia with the loss of all 33 crew. It is thought that water entered the hold where gypsum ore was being stored and caused the rock to shift and harden. This instability compounded with winds of and waves led to her sinking. The Liberian-flagged ship was owned by Skaarup Shipping Corp., of Greenwich, Connecticut, and under charter to National Gypsum Co., a U.S. company. The ship had previously survived the
Perfect Storm of 1991 two years earlier. ==Confirmed tornadoes==