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Miami Snow? 1970s Cold Wave Shocked the Nation
1 Dec
Summary
- The 1970s experienced historically cold temperatures across the Northern Hemisphere.
- Record cold in 1977 led to the only known snow event in Miami, Florida.
- Fears of an impending ice age were discussed in popular media during the 1970s.

The 1970s stand out as a historically cold decade, with significant temperature drops affecting the Northern Hemisphere. A notable extreme event occurred in January 1977 when a powerful cold wave brought the only recorded snowfall to the Miami, Florida area, surprising residents and meteorologists alike.
This period of intense cold led to widespread discussion and concern about a potential 'global cooling' trend. Scientific observations indicated more record daily low temperatures than highs across the United States during the 1970s, a reversal of the warming trend seen in subsequent decades.
Amidst these cold spells, popular media and some scientific interpretations fueled fears of an approaching ice age. However, climatologists at the time recognized that while paleoclimate data suggested natural glacial cycles, human industrial pollution was also starting to be understood as a factor that would eventually lead to global warming.




