Tamarack, California
| Tamarack | |
|---|---|
| Unincorporated community | |
| 
 Tamarack ![]() Tamarack Location in California  | |
| Coordinates: 38°26′20″N 120°04′34″W / 38.43889°N 120.07611°W | |
| Country | United States | 
| State | California | 
| County | Calaveras County | 
| Elevation[1] | 6,913 ft (2,107 m) | 
Tamarack, formerly known as Camp Tamarack,[2] is an unincorporated community in Calaveras County, California, in the United States. It was founded in the 1920s.[2] A nearby weather station, located across the Alpine County line, has been the site of several United States meteorological records.
Tamarack is located at an elevation of 6,913 feet (2,107 m),[1] on the west slope of the Sierra Nevada near Bear Valley and south of South Lake Tahoe.
Climate
The greatest snow depth ever recorded in North America was recorded in Tamarack: in January 1911, 390 inches (990.6 cm) of snow fell, leading to a snow depth in March of 451 inches (1,145.5 cm).[3][4] Tamarack also holds the record for greatest seasonal snowfall in California: during the winter of 1906−1907, it received 883 or 884 inches (2,242.8 or 2,245.4 cm) of snow.[3][4][5]
| Climate data for Tamarack, California | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year | 
| Record high °F (°C) |  65 (18)  | 
 70 (21)  | 
 68 (20)  | 
 76 (24)  | 
 82 (28)  | 
 88 (31)  | 
 90 (32)  | 
 88 (31)  | 
 85 (29)  | 
 86 (30)  | 
 70 (21)  | 
 65 (18)  | 
 90 (32)  | 
| Average high °F (°C) |  38.4 (3.6)  | 
 40.4 (4.7)  | 
 44.2 (6.8)  | 
 49.2 (9.6)  | 
 55.9 (13.3)  | 
 63.2 (17.3)  | 
 72.5 (22.5)  | 
 72.5 (22.5)  | 
 65.1 (18.4)  | 
 55.0 (12.8)  | 
 44.9 (7.2)  | 
 39.1 (3.9)  | 
 53.37 (11.88)  | 
| Average low °F (°C) |  11.4 (−11.4)  | 
 13.6 (−10.2)  | 
 16.3 (−8.7)  | 
 20.7 (−6.3)  | 
 26.1 (−3.3)  | 
 33.3 (0.7)  | 
 41.9 (5.5)  | 
 40.9 (4.9)  | 
 35.0 (1.7)  | 
 27.6 (−2.4)  | 
 20.4 (−6.4)  | 
 13.2 (−10.4)  | 
 25.03 (−3.86)  | 
| Record low °F (°C) |  −45 (−43)  | 
 −26 (−32)  | 
 −17 (−27)  | 
 −8 (−22)  | 
 0 (−18)  | 
 2 (−17)  | 
 24 (−4)  | 
 14 (−10)  | 
 14 (−10)  | 
 −1 (−18)  | 
 −12 (−24)  | 
 −26 (−32)  | 
 −45 (−43)  | 
| Average precipitation inches (mm) |  8.88 (225.6)  | 
 8.47 (215.1)  | 
 8.06 (204.7)  | 
 3.10 (78.7)  | 
 2.34 (59.4)  | 
 1.47 (37.3)  | 
 0.76 (19.3)  | 
 0.43 (10.9)  | 
 1.17 (29.7)  | 
 2.46 (62.5)  | 
 4.81 (122.2)  | 
 6.45 (163.8)  | 
 52.78 (1,340.6)  | 
| Average snowfall inches (cm) |  87.7 (222.8)  | 
 87.5 (222.3)  | 
 79.3 (201.4)  | 
 28.9 (73.4)  | 
 20.0 (50.8)  | 
 6.7 (17)  | 
 0.0 (0)  | 
 0.0 (0)  | 
 5.5 (14)  | 
 16.0 (40.6)  | 
 42.6 (108.2)  | 
 69.5 (176.5)  | 
 443.7 (1,127)  | 
| Source: [6] | |||||||||||||
References
- 1 2 U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Tamarack, California
 - 1 2 Durham, David L. (1998). California's Geographic Names: A Gazetteer of Historic and Modern Names of the State. Clovis, Calif.: Word Dancer Press. p. 835. ISBN 1-884995-14-4.
 - 1 2 Christopher C. Burt, Extreme Weather: A Guide & Record Book, page 77: "...the deepest snow depth ever recorded in North America, belongs to Tamarack, California. Here, near Yosemite's Tuolumne Meadows, 390ʺ fell in January 1911. This led to a level snow depth of 451ʺ (37.5 feet) by March of that year. Tamarack also holds California's greatest seasonal catch on 884ʺ in the notoriously wet winter of 1906-1907."
 - 1 2 Sierra Nevada Virtual Museum
 - ↑ Charles Nevers Holmes, In New York City Were the Snowiest Place, in Tychos (1920), page 20: "And, at Tamarack, California, about a mile and one-half above sea level, there was a record of a snowfall of 73 1/2 feet which fell during the winter of 1906-1907. Now, a snowfall of 73 1/2 feet, of 883 inches, is certainly considerable..."
 - ↑ "TAMARACK, CALIFORNIA (048781)". Western Regional Climate Center. Retrieved June 1, 2016.
 
Coordinates: 38°26′20″N 120°04′34″W / 38.43889°N 120.07611°W

