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East Coast storm this weekend could become bomb cyclone with more snow, wind from Carolinas to New England
On the heels of Winter Storm Fern, a strong storm will form off the East Coast this weekend that will bring more snow and wind. Here is our latest forecast with what we know and what could happen.
The heavy snowfall ended on Sunday night, though some communities in western Pennsylvania saw snow continue until Monday morning. The storm dropped more than 10 inches of snow across most of the area, with some counties seeing between 16 and 20 inches of snow.
Less than a week after a powerful storm blanketed the entire state in snow, some Pennsylvanians might be in line for another round of snowfall. AccuWeather reports that “an East Coast bomb cyclone” might be on the way,
Forecasters are expecting heavy snowfall to continue in some parts of the country on Monday, Jan. 26. Check how much has fallen so far.
Snow showers are impacting the Tri-State Area Monday morning and afternoon. A cold pattern will stick around for storm cleanup, leaving roads and sidewalks slushy and messy.
Three days after the city’s biggest snowstorm in years, many New Yorkers are still scaling mounds of snow and ice. Cleaning it up is a shared responsibility.
There is a chance of light snow in East Tennessee on Jan. 30, according to the National Weather Service. The new round of winter weather will mainly affect northeast Tennessee, with Knoxville at the edge of its current reach, according to the forecast.
As Mayor Cherelle L. Parker put it earlier this week, we’re not out of the woods yet. The storm that hit Philadelphia Sunday brought with it 9.3 inches of snow for the city proper — the most we’ve seen at one time in a decade.
Bonito Lake, N.M., received 31 inches, the most in the United States this weekend, the agency said. East of the Mississippi, the highest totals were recorded in western Pennsylvania, where 20 inches had fallen near Clintonville, about 60 miles north of Pittsburgh, as of 8:30 p.m. Sunday.
8hon MSN
Where will the snow go? Here's how NYC is using "hot tubs" to dig out from the winter storm.
As temperatures in New York City remain below freezing, the Department of Sanitation is getting proactive in removing piles of snow from last weekend's winter storm.
A bomb cyclone winter storm is whipping up — and it’s headed for New York City, threatening even more show and colder temps this weekend. The storm is forecast to blow into town Saturday night and stay through Sunday.