A massive winter storm is set to bring snow and ice to much of the South. Here's what to know about snow forecasts in Texas, Georgia, and other states.
So, as the Deep South grapples with the foreign language of snowflake icons making a (for some, repeat) appearance in weather apps, a reality check is in order.
We’re watching a storm that will form along the Gulf Coast of Texas late Thursday ... merge with a disturbance entering the northeast United States from Canada. While this scenario can ...
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.
Tens of millions of residents along the East Coast are bracing for several inches of snow Sunday followed by dangerously cold temperatures that will take hold in much of the country from the
Winter’s most potent Arctic blast yet is about to unleash dangerously low temperatures that will be the coldest to hit the United States ... to the National Weather Service.
adverse weather conditions affecting operations in Central Florida, the Mississippi River basin, the Gulf Coast of the United States, Canada or Brazil, and including potential hurricanes ...
Snow and ice will spread through the South early this week, including near the Gulf Coast where wintry weather is rare.
The Gulf Coast is preparing for a significant and rare winter weather event as arctic air surges into the region Sunday night, bringing extreme cold and the potential for impactful wintry precipitation on Tuesday.
An already active winter is about to shift into overdrive as a trio of storms over the weekend and into next week deliver snow to the Midwest, East<a class="excerpt-read-more" href=" More
It has been cold and windy with more sunshine today, and it is going to get even more frigid during the overnight hours tonight. This evening through late Monday morning, an Extreme Cold Warning is in place as wind chills could drop into the single digits for some inland spots.