2009 North American Christmas blizzard

http://dbpedia.org/resource/2009_North_American_Christmas_blizzard an entity of type: Thing

The 2009 North American Christmas blizzard was a powerful winter storm and severe weather event that affected the Midwestern United States, Great Plains, Southeastern United States, the Eastern Seaboard, and parts of Ontario. The storm began to develop on December 22 before intensifying to produce extreme winds and precipitation by the morning of December 24. The storm's rapid development made it difficult for forecasters to predict. The blizzard was reported to have claimed at least 21 lives, and disrupted air travel during the Christmas travel season. In the Southeastern and Central United States, there were 27 reported tornadoes on December 23–24. The storm, a Category 5 "Extreme" one on the Regional Snowfall Index scale, was the first winter weather event to rank as such since the Nort rdf:langString
rdf:langString 2009 North American Christmas blizzard
xsd:integer 2009
xsd:integer 25551836
xsd:integer 1096554485
xsd:double 19.62
rdf:langString EF3
rdf:langString Midwest, Great Plains, Parts of Ontario, Eastern Seaboard
xsd:date 2009-12-22
xsd:integer 0 1 2 4 8
xsd:integer 2009
rdf:langString Satellite image of the storm on Christmas Eve.
rdf:langString the 2009–10 North American winter
xsd:integer 15
xsd:date 2009-12-28
rdf:langString yes
xsd:integer 15
xsd:integer 21
rdf:langString The 2009 North American Christmas blizzard was a powerful winter storm and severe weather event that affected the Midwestern United States, Great Plains, Southeastern United States, the Eastern Seaboard, and parts of Ontario. The storm began to develop on December 22 before intensifying to produce extreme winds and precipitation by the morning of December 24. The storm's rapid development made it difficult for forecasters to predict. The blizzard was reported to have claimed at least 21 lives, and disrupted air travel during the Christmas travel season. In the Southeastern and Central United States, there were 27 reported tornadoes on December 23–24. The storm, a Category 5 "Extreme" one on the Regional Snowfall Index scale, was the first winter weather event to rank as such since the North American blizzard of 1996.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 12572

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