Overnight Wednesday was cold in B.C., with many cities breaking records as the province gets hit with an arctic outflow, sparking a number of weather warnings from Environment Canada.
As much of the province turned into an ice box, at least a dozen cities, towns, or areas reached new all-time lows for Feb. 10.
Burns Lake Area saw -40.2 C which broke a record from -33.4 C set in 2018.
The oldest record to break was seen in Quesnel, which saw -35.3 C overnight, breaking the 1905 record of -34.4 C.
Weather warnings remain in effect for most of the province.
Clash of the titans! Arctic air firmly entrenched over BC, including coastal areas, will battle pacific moisture beginning on the evening of Friday February 12, 2021. The expected outcome? Low elevation snowfall event! Stay tuned to your local forecast for details. â„ï¸#BCstorm pic.twitter.com/hITBYSl0cT
— ECCC Weather British Columbia (@ECCCWeatherBC) February 11, 2021
Weather records broken on Wednesday:
Clinton: -31 C (-29.8 C set in 2019)
Dease Lake Area: -40.7 C (-37.8 C set in 1951)
Mackenzie Area: -31.6 C (-28.5 C set in 2014)
Nelson: -12.8 C (-11.9 C in 2014)
Prince Rupert Area: -15.1 C (-12.2 C set in 1975)
Puntzi Mountain Area -41 C (-38.8 C set in 2019)
Quesnel: -35.3 C (-34.4 C set in 1905)
Sandspit Area: -7 C (-6.7 C set in 1975)
Smithers: -34.8 C (-30.6 set in 1939)
Sparwood: -27.8 C (-27.5 C in 2019)
Williams Lake: -30.2 C (-29.9 C set in 2019)
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