Snow, Thanksgiving
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Up to a foot of snow was expected in some of the hardest hit areas, with travel to become "extremely dangerous."
As of publication, the expected amount is roughly 3 inches, according to the National Weather Service’s expected snowfall forecast found on their website here. That amount is comparable to much of the state, though central and north-central Pennsylvania may expect closer to 4 or 5 inches.
Several communities across the Twin Cities are under a snow emergency on Sunday following a Thanksgiving weekend storm that dumped several inches on parts of Minnesota.
It was so shockingly cold that there were short-lived fears of a new ice age. Scientists think human activity contributed to the historic weather.
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Michigan Forecast: Widespread snow expected Monday night, where the heavy lake effect will fall
A Winter Weather Advisory covers Ottawa, Newaygo and Lake counties for the same period, with 3 to 7 inches of snowfall expected. The most intense snowfall is anticipated this afternoon and evening as southwest winds draw moisture across Lake Michigan, with snow rates potentially reaching 1 to 2 inches per hour in the hardest-hit areas.
Some areas of Middle Tennessee could see some light snowfall accumulation Dec. 1. Here's what to know about timing and impacted areas.
In Carbon and Monroe counties, the advisory will be in effect from 4 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday, with 3 to 5 inches of snow expected broadly. Some areas could see 6 inches. A light glaze of ice is expected.
Dry weather is expected Tuesday evening into Tuesday night, ahead of our next chance for snow during the second half of the day on Wednesday. Winds will be picking up, around 10 to 15 miles per hour into Wednesday morning, so plan on wind chills being much cooler with some single digits possible.