From a historical perspective, the upcoming major Northeast winter storm could prove to be unprecedented in terms of its early arrival in the season and the amount of snow it will drop.
ALSO: Saturday vs. Oct. 1987 New England Snow Storm
AccuWeather.com meteorologists are now confident that several inches to a foot of heavy, wet and, in some cases, damaging snow will fall over parts of the mid-Atlantic and New England on Saturday.
Expert Senior Meteorologist Alex Sosnowski has specifics on the forecast for the upcoming storm.
The notion of a pre-Halloween snowstorm has our meteorologists and climatologists scrambling to put the storm into some sort of perspective as to how many records could be busted by this snowstorm.
For many cities, the snowstorm could go down as the biggest on record for the month of October:
Largest October Snow Events:
--Allentown, Pa.: 2.2 inches on Oct. 31, 1925
--Baltimore, Md.: 2.5 inches on Oct. 30, 1925
--Boston, Mass.: 1.1 inches on Oct. 29, 2005
--Hartford, Conn.: 1.7 inches on Oct. 10, 1979
--Philadelphia, Pa.: 2.1 inches on Oct. 10, 1979
--New York City, N.Y. (Central Park): 0.8 of an inch on Oct. 30, 1925
--Washington, D.C.: 2.0 inches on Oct. 31, 1925
Allentown, Pa., and Hartford, Conn., the cities with the best shot at breaking this record, could also record their first-ever 6-inch or more snowstorm in October.
Also of note, Central Park in New York City has never recorded an inch or more of snow in October since records started being kept in 1869.

As the next list shows, this will be the first measurable October snowfall for most of these cities since 1979, except for at Central Park, where the last measurable snow in October was nearly 60 years ago in 1952.
Most Recent Date of Measurable Snow in October:
--Allentown, Pa.: 1.0 inches on Oct. 10, 1979
--Baltimore, Md.: 0.3 of an inch on Oct. 10, 1979
--Boston, Mass.: 0.2 of an inch on Oct. 10, 1979
--Hartford, Conn.: 1.7 inches on Oct. 10, 1979
--Philadelphia, Pa.: 2.1 inches on Oct. 10, 1979
--New York City, N.Y. (Central Park): 0.5 of an inch on Oct. 21, 1952
--Washington, D.C.: 0.3 of an inch on Oct. 10, 1979
(* Measurable means more than a trace of snow was recorded)
Records have been kept in Allentown since 1922, Baltimore since 1892, Boston since 1872, Hartford since 1905, Philadelphia since 1884, New York City/Central Park since 1869 and Washington since 1884.
NOAA released its 2013 Atlantic Hurricane Season Forecast Thursday, predicting another active season.
This holiday weekend, a rare astronomical phenomenon will occur that will not be seen again until October 2015.
San Antonio is getting hit by heavy thunderstorms on Friday afternoon and evening.
A few days after a chilly storm departs the Northeast, warm weather will make a strong comeback in parts of the Midwest and the East later next week.
Severe weather and drenching downpours will affect parts of the Plains and Midwest over the Memorial Day Weekend.
"This pup was literally singing when he saw his family," Michelle Karolicki, relocation program manager of the Central Oklahoma Humane Society, said about a reunion that took place on Thursday.
| Extreme | Location | |
|---|---|---|
| High | N/A | |
| Low | N/A | |
| Precip | N/A |
Kentucky (1894)
Snowstorm across state; daytime accumulation
of 4-6".
Knoxville, TN (1807)
Hail 10" in circumference hail; a tornado went
over the river, sucking fish out of the water.
Philadelphia, PA (1992)
A dramatic cold frontal passage. Early afternoon
temperature over 80 degrees fell to a late-day
reading in the 40s.
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