It turns milder today with afternoon high temperatures likely in the lower 40’s as high pressure to the east of here. It’ll remain moderately chilly as we head through the upcoming weekend and the pattern will become increasingly unsettled with the chance of showers by Sunday and Monday.
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Bitter cold Arctic air persists across much of the nation with numerous daily low temperature records set across the southern and eastern states. In fact, a few all-time low temperature records were set this morning across southern Louisiana where clear skies, light winds, and a fresh, deep snowpack allowed temperatures to plunge to single digit levels across the region. A rare major winter storm has brought significant accumulating snow across the southern US from Texas-to-Florida-to-the Carolinas and, in some cases, this matched or surpassed the great winter storm of February 1895. The precipitation field associated with this southern storm will push off the southeast coast today, but the bitter cold will persist for a bit longer.
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It turns colder today compared to Tuesday with afternoon temperatures confined to the 20’s across the Denver metro region. It stays relatively cold on Thursday, but then milder on Friday and temperatures should climb into the 40’s. A change back to much colder takes place by this weekend and there will be the chance of snow from late Friday night into Saturday.
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Arctic high pressure will settle over the area today and then moves offshore on Thursday. As a result, it’ll remain bitterly cold for another day around here with afternoon highs near 20 degrees and overnight temperatures should drop to the lower teens. With the high pressure offshore on Thursday, there will some moderation in temperatures and afternoon highs both tomorrow and Friday should be in the middle-to-upper 20’s.
Elsewhere, the southern states from Texas to the Carolinas continue to suffer through unusual severe winter weather conditions during this nationwide Arctic air outbreak. Accumulating snow fell yesterday on Houston, Texas on the order of 4 inches or so (their 2nd biggest snowstorm) and as much as 10 inches on New Orleans, Louisiana. And perhaps most amazing of all, there are single digits temperatures this morning across southern Louisiana.
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Arctic high pressure will settle over the area today and then moves offshore on Thursday. As a result, it’ll remain bitterly cold for another day around here with afternoon highs confined to the teens once again and overnight temperatures should return to the single digits. With the high pressure offshore on Thursday, there will some moderation in temperatures and afternoon highs both tomorrow and Friday should be in the middle-to-upper 20’s.
Elsewhere, the southern states from Texas to the Carolinas continue to suffer through unusual severe winter weather conditions during this nationwide Arctic air outbreak. Accumulating snow fell yesterday on Houston, Texas on the order of 4 inches or so (their 2nd biggest snowstorm) and as much as 10 inches on New Orleans, Louisiana. And perhaps most amazing of all, there are single digits temperatures this morning across southern Louisiana.
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Arctic high pressure will settle over the area today and then moves offshore on Thursday. As a result, it’ll remain bitterly cold for another day around here with afternoon highs near 20 degrees and overnight temperatures should drop to near 10 degrees. With the high pressure offshore on Thursday, there will some moderation in temperatures and afternoon highs both tomorrow and Friday should be in the middle-to-upper 20’s.
Elsewhere, the southern states from Texas to the Carolinas continue to suffer through unusual severe winter weather conditions during this nationwide Arctic air outbreak. Accumulating snow fell yesterday on Houston, Texas on the order of 4 inches or so (their 2nd biggest snowstorm) and as much as 10 inches on New Orleans, Louisiana. And perhaps most amazing of all, there are single digits temperatures this morning across southern Louisiana.
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Low pressure pushes off to our east today and skies should clear allowing for plenty of sunshine during the mid-day and afternoon hours. It remains relatively cold on Wednesday, but a gradual warming trend will lift temperatures to near 45 degrees by the time the weekend gets underway.
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A rare weather event has begun across the Gulf coast that will result in accumulating snow and ice in unusual places such as Houston (TX), New Orleans (LA), Tallahassee (FL), and Myrtle Beach (SC). NOAA has issued “Winter Storm Warnings” all the way from Texas to the Carolinas and - in an unprecedented fashion - even “Blizzard Warnings” have been issued from far eastern Texas to southern Louisiana. In this entire stretch of the southern US, there can be at least a few inches of snow by early Wednesday and an ice glaze may be included in the mix as well in many areas. By this evening, the accumulating snow can make it’s way as far north and east as southeastern Virginia and there can even be a touch of snow along the DC-to-Philly-to-NYC corridor. Arctic air that has enveloped the nation from coast-to-coast is the main contributor to this very wintry and rare weather event for the southern US.
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Bitter cold Arctic air continues to dominate the scene across the eastern states and we’ll do no better than 30 degrees for highs this afternoon and likely drop to the single digits in the overnight hours. A storm system along the Gulf coastal region will produce snow across the southern states from Texas to the Carolinas, but its precipitation field should stay to the south of here.
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Bitter cold this morning, but temperatures should climb markedly this afternoon with high temperatures likely close to the 40-degree mark after a “single digit” start to the day. Temperatures should be moderate for much of the remainder of the week and then it turns colder again this weekend with an increasing chance of snow.
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