[Just another confirmation that “global warming” is NOT happening…]
The accumulation has prompted the closing of Yosemite National Park. As crews worked to restore vital services, officials have not yet set a date for it to reopen.
Yosemite National Park, an iconic symbol of American wilderness, has seen plenty of snow in its 133-year history. But the snow drifts piling up there this week have been extreme, and they’ve kept the park closed for five days and counting.
The storms hitting the area over the last week or so have coincided with unusually cold weather, causing precipitation to fall as snow rather than rain in the Yosemite Valley.
“One after another, they have kept coming,” said Jim Bagnall, a forecaster at the Weather Service office in nearby Hanford, Calif.
In one sign of the extreme weather, the floor of the Yosemite Valley recorded 40 inches of snow depth on Tuesday, beating the 36 inches recorded there on the same day in 1969.
The valley, about seven miles long, sits at an elevation of nearly 4,000 feet. Mr. Bagnall said its greatest-ever snow depth — 60 inches — was in 1907, a year after snowpack record-keeping began there.
Yosemite National Park was closed last week and had been scheduled to reopen on Thursday. But as of Wednesday night, park officials had postponed that reopening date and not settled on a new one. Snowdrifts were up to 15 feet deep in some areas, and crews were working to restore critical services.
In the foothills of the Sierra Nevada, the mountain range that contains Yosemite, roads have also been closed in recent days, inconveniencing residents in communities like Oakhurst and Mariposa, Mr. Bagnall said.
The National Park Service did not respond to a request for comment on Wednesday night.
The record snow amount in Yosemite is the latest extreme precipitation to pummel California this winter — deluges that have led to repeated episodes of flooding, power outages and evacuations.
Last week, heavy snow fell in the mountains of Southern California, including in some spots that almost never see snow. People living at lower elevations there also faced floods triggered by unusually heavy rainstorms.