PA is a relatively large state with large differences in elevation and proximity to bodies of water, so snowfall varies widely. In SE PA, the average snowfall is about 25 inches. It goes up to 35-45 as you go west into central and parts of northeastern PA, as well as west of the mountains. The mountains can average over 100 inches, as can areas up in Erie and Crawford counties where lake effect snow is heavy.You can see a good visual of this at the attached map (related link) below.
PA is a relatively large state with large differences in elevation and proximity to bodies of water, so snowfall varies widely. In SE PA, the average snowfall is about 25 inches. It goes up to 35-45 as you go west into central and parts of northeastern PA, as well as west of the mountains. The mountains can average over 100 inches, as can areas up in Erie and Crawford counties where lake effect snow is heavy.
State College, home to Accuweather, a local NWS office, and one of the best meteorology departments in the world, keeps pretty good records of these things. Average snowfall is around 45 inches annually.
It is around 40.7 inches per year average. US geological data maps show the driest part of PA as receiving between 30 to 40 inches annually.
Warren averages around 100 inches annually, with considerably less not far to the south and east.
About 90 - 100" annually
About 49"
36.9 in oct-april
A little more than Pittsburgh - about 42"
10 to 12 on average
365
The coldest temperature ever recorded in Pittsburgh, PA was -22 degrees Fahrenheit on January 19, 1994. The last coldest temperature that was reached was -20 degrees Fahrenheit.
Over the course of a year, the most snow falls in the mountains, particularly in the west where they're higher. Many ski resorts in the Cascades, Sierra Nevada, and Rockies average 300-400 inches annually, sometimes more. The most snow ever recorded was only about a decade ago on Mt. Baker in Washington - 1,040 inches. Other than the mountains, areas downwind of the Great Lakes can receive a lot of snow, averaging more than 150 inches and in places, 200+ inches in locations such as the Keeweenaw peninsula of Michigan, north-central lower Michigan, extreme northwestern PA and southwestern NY, and particularly the Tug Hill Plateau east of Lake Ontario, which holds many records east of the Mississippi.
It's around 55 inches.
A little more than Pittsburgh - about 42"
The average annual snowfall is anywhere from about 22 to 32 inches, on the higher end of that range in the northwest and lower in the southeastern part of the county.
50-60" depending on elevation (there is no station that records snowfall at this particular location)
About 40"
25-30"
Around 50 inches.
6.6"
About 35-40 inches.
55-60"
About 80 inches.
It is 89.2 miles from Harrisburg, PA to Center Line Avenue in Williamsport, PA. It is 69 miles from Harrisburg to State Line, PA .