USA TODAY | - |
Now
it's the South's turn to get in on the snowy fun. A rare southern
winter storm is forecast to bring ice and snow all the way from southern
Texas to southern Virginia later Tuesday and into Wednesday.
Some parts of the Carolinas could pick up as much as six inches from the storm.
A rare southern winter storm is forecast to bring ice and snow all the way from southern Texas to southern Virginia later Tuesday and into Wednesday.
"Very hazardous travel is likely across a long swath of the South ... in the Tuesday to Wednesday timeframe," reported Weather Channel meteorologist Nick Wiltgen.
"A band of snow, sleet, and freezing rain is expected to materialize by Tuesday afternoon near the central Gulf Coast, and become heavier over eastern North Carolina and into South Carolina, with very cold air in place," according to National Weather Service meteorologist David Hamrick.
Snow totals are expected to top three inches from southeastern Alabama to eastern North Carolina, according to AccuWeather meteorologist Kristina Pydynowski. This zone stretches across Montgomery, Ala., Augusta, Ga., and lies just east of Raleigh.
"A small area in eastern parts of the Carolinas will even have upwards of 6 inches from this storm, including Fayetteville, N.C. and Columbia, S.C.," she reports.
TRAVEL TROUBLE: 'Extreme cold' grounds hundreds of flights in Midwest
For Charleston, S.C. and Savannah, Ga., it's the first winter storm watch issued for those two cities since Feb. 11, 2010, according to Wiltgen.
Meanwhile, incredibly cold temperatures and wind chills will continue through Wednesday across much of the eastern U.S.
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