A moderately cold air mass has moved into the Mid-Atlantic region following the passage of a cold frontal system and now attention has turned to the Gulf of Mexico and the southeastern states where moisture is gathering. A storm will develop near the South Carolina coastline by early tonight and move to a position off the New Jersey coastline by mid-day Sunday. This system is going to generate a new round of accumulating snow in the DC-to-Philly-to-NYC corridor from late tonight into the mid-day or early afternoon hours on Sunday with several inches on the table for many spots. Looking ahead, the active weather pattern of recent days will continue beyond tomorrow’s storm with additional chances of snow and/or ice coming to the Mid-Atlantic from around mid-week into next weekend.
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Moderate cold air will follow the passage of a cold front for the upcoming weekend and attention will turn to the Gulf of Mexico and the southeastern states where a lot of moisture will be gathering. A storm will develop near the South Carolina coastline by early Saturday night and move to a position off the New Jersey coastline by mid-day Sunday. This system is likely to bring another round of accumulating snow to the DC-to-Philly-to-NYC corridor from later Saturday night into Sunday morning with several inches on the table. Looking ahead, very cold air will pour into the interior Northwest, Northern Plains, Upper Midwest and Great Lakes next week and the overall active weather pattern will bring additional snow threats to the Mid-Atlantic region.
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Low pressure is impacting the Upper Midwest today with accumulating snow from Iowa to Wisconsin and it’ll push into the southeastern part of Canada by later tomorrow. A trailing strong cold front will slide into the eastern US on Friday and there can be a wintry mess of snow, sleet and/or freezing rain ahead of it in some suburban locations of the I-95 corridor from late tonight into early Friday. By later Friday, it’ll turn mild enough for just plain rain showers in the DC-to-Philly-to-NYC corridor and temperatures will likely climb into the 40’s.
Moderate cold air will follow the cold frontal passage for the upcoming weekend and attention will turn to the Gulf of Mexico and Southeast US where a lot of moisture will be gathering. A storm will develop in the southeastern states by early Saturday night and - depending on the interaction of two separate waves of energy aloft - it could end up pushing far enough to the north and east to have an impact the Mid-Atlantic region with accumulating snow - perhaps mixed with rain at times - from late Saturday night into mid-day Sunday. Looking ahead, very cold air will pour into the interior Northwest, Northern Plains, Upper Midwest and Great Lakes early next week and it looks like it will then spread to the Mid-Atlantic region at mid-week - potentially setting us up for an extended period of colder-than-normal conditions…and likely additional snow threats.
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Low pressure continues to deepen off the Mid-Atlantic coastline and it will continue to have a major impact on the northern Mid-Atlantic through tonight in the area from eastern PA-to-New Jersey-to-southeastern New York. Mixed precipitation this morning has changed to snow in most places as colder air wraps into the system from the north/northeast. There will continue to be small-scale bands of very heavy snowfall from later today through tonight and many spots will end up with 1-2 feet of accumulation from this long duration storm system by the time it winds down later Tuesday.
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A major and complex storm system is coming to the Mid-Atlantic region and it will be a long duration event with impact into Tuesday. Indeed, this storm could turn out to be one of the all-time greats for some sections of eastern PA, upstate New Jersey, and southeastern New York. The storm will come in two phases with the first part already underway and associated with a process known as “overrunning”. The second phase of this major winter storm event will feature a very slow moving and powerful storm just off the Mid-Atlantic coastline.
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The stage is set…Arctic air is in place anchored by strong high pressure to the north and a major and complex storm system is coming to the Mid-Atlantic region and it will be a long duration event with impact from Sunday into Tuesday. Accumulations of 6+ inches are possible in the DC metro region with 12+ inches possible in the Philly and NYC metro areas. The storm will come in two phases with the first part associated with a process called “overrunning” and the second phase featuring a major coastal storm. The combination of the potential heavy snow and strong winds may prompt the need for “blizzard warnings” to be issued in at least parts of the Mid-Atlantic region for this upcoming event.
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Arctic air has its grip on the Mid-Atlantic region and it won’t loosen its control anytime soon. Winds will howl today out of the NW and the Arctic cold will stick around through the weekend. A long duration winter storm event will get underway on Sunday and, as a storm intensifies off the Mid-Atlantic coastline, impact can continue all the way into early Tuesday with significant snow accumulations of at least several inches on the table.
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Winds have increased markedly today as an Arctic air mass arrives in the Mid-Atlantic/Northeast US from the eastern part of Canada. Temperatures will plunge in the overnight hours and Friday promises to be the coldest day of the winter season so far with continuing biting-cold NW winds. The Arctic cold will stick around well into the upcoming weekend and attention will turn to the west as the next winter storm crosses the nation. That storm poses a threat for significant accumulating snow in the Mid-Atlantic region and it could turn out to be a long duration event with potential impact all the way from Sunday into Tuesday.
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Yesterday’s light wintry mix in the Mid-Atlantic region has pushed off to the northeast and a look ahead includes an Arctic blast and a potential major winter storm. Increasingly strong NW winds later tomorrow will signal the arrival of an Arctic blast that will bring temperatures down to the teens by early Friday and the last day of the work week will turn out to be the coldest so far this season. The Arctic cold will stick around well into the upcoming weekend in the Mid-Atlantic region and attention here will turn to the west as the next winter storm crosses the nation. That storm poses a threat for accumulating snow in the Mid-Atlantic region beginning late in the upcoming weekend and it could turn out to be a significant and long duration event with an impact all the way into late Tuesday.
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A wintry mess of snow, sleet, freezing rain, and/or plain rain continues in parts of the Mid-Atlantic region at mid-day and temperatures remain near the freezing mark in many locations. As a result, there can be slick spots this afternoon and evening on untreated surfaces in suburban locations along the I-95 corridor even as the precipitation winds down. After a drier and quieter day on Wednesday, low pressure will intensify off the Carolina coastline on Thursday and winds in the DC-to-Philly-to-NYC corridor will pick up noticeably as a very cold air mass pushes in from the northwest. The end of the week and the beginning of the weekend will indeed feature some of the coldest air yet this season and then attention will turn to the next storm threat which could bring snow by late in the weekend or the early part of next week.
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