Three winter storms will sweep across the East Coast on Sunday and Monday, with the Midwest, South, and Northeast all set to be blanketed in inches of snow
A Siberian chill is on the horizon, threatening to plunge the U.S. into a deep freeze in parts of the east coast
Dangerously cold weather spread over the Midwest on Saturday and is headed toward the East Coast, where temperatures well below seasonal norms are expected starting late Sunday and into next week.
As new Arctic air enters the United States, NWS meteorologists warn about the “most intense” snow storm of the season.
Another massive winter storm is forecast to pummel the southern and eastern U.S., with impacts from Texas to the Carolinas.
Icy temperatures were expected from the Midwest to the East Coast. National Weather Service The NWS map created ... nearly two-dozen states were under either winter storm warnings or winter ...
A major winter blast of snow, ice, wind and plunging temperatures in the U.S. stirred dangerous travel conditions from central and southern states all the way to the East Coast early Monday, prompting schools and government offices in several states to close.
Millions of Americans from the Plains to the East Coast faced the threat of blizzards, heavy snow, treacherous ice and freezing rain through Jan 6, the National Weather Service said on Jan 4. Governors in Kentucky and Virginia declared states of emergency ...
Some areas of the U.S. may see temperatures as low as -20 or -30 degrees early next week as arctic air from Siberia rolls in.
The coldest air of the season so far will settle across the United States this weekend, producing a blanket of snow in the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast on Sunday, and bringing below-freezing temperatures with dangerously blustery winds to most of the country.
As a massive winter storm is rolling through regions of the United States on Monday, see pictures of snow from across the Midwest and East Coast.
A major winter blast of snow, ice, wind and plunging temperatures in the U.S. stirred dangerous travel conditions from central and southern states all the way to the East Coast early Monday, prompting schools and government offices in several states to close.