Skip to content

Breaking News

  • Kenny Stuyvenberg shovels his driveway as the latest round of...

    Wm. Glasheen/Post-Crescent

    Kenny Stuyvenberg shovels his driveway as the latest round of winter weather moves through the Fox Cities on Wednesday, November 13, 2019, in Kimberly, Wis.

  • The latest round of winter weather moves through the Fox...

    The latest round of winter weather moves through the Fox Cities on Wednesday, November 13, 2019, in Kaukauna, Wis. (Wm. Glasheen/The Post-Crescent via AP)

  • A woman bundled up against the cold walks on an...

    A woman bundled up against the cold walks on an autumn morning in Philadelphia, Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2019. An arctic blast that sent shivers across the Midwest spread to the eastern U.S. on Wednesday, with bitter weather establishing new records from Mississippi to Maine. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)

  • Employee Dustin Zoglman throws salt on a slippery walkway in...

    Employee Dustin Zoglman throws salt on a slippery walkway in front of the Red Lion Hotel Paper Valley Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2019, in Appleton, Wis. (Dan Powers/The Post-Crescent via AP)

  • Traffic moves slowly along College Avenue as snow falls Wednesday,...

    Traffic moves slowly along College Avenue as snow falls Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2019, in Appleton, Wis. (Dan Powers/The Post-Crescent via AP)

of

Expand
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

CLICK HERE if you are having a problem viewing the photos on a mobile device

[vemba-video id=”van/batchfeed/2019/11/13/wgn_6a196060-065b-11ea-ba24-13ab001dba9c”]

By David Sharp | Associated Press

PORTLAND, Maine — An arctic blast that sent shivers across the Midwest spread to the eastern U.S. on Wednesday, with bitter weather establishing new records from Mississippi to Maine.

Cold temperatures that stretched to the Gulf Coast followed a snowstorm that the National Weather Service said contributed to nearly 30% of the country being covered in snow as of Wednesday.
Snowfall and slippery roads were blamed for more than a half-dozen deaths across the country since Monday.

In the Northeast, temperatures dipped to single digits early Wednesday in some communities. Forecasters projected even lower temperatures late Wednesday and early Thursday in some locations.

The frigid airmass was producing mid-winter conditions, even though the calendar says fall and Thanksgiving is still two weeks away, said Mark Bloomer, a meteorologist with National Weather Service in Caribou, Maine.

Record low temperatures for the date were recorded Tuesday in New York City; Buffalo, New York; Burlington, Vermont; and parts of Ohio. More daily records were broken Wednesday morning in Burlington, along with several locations in Pennsylvania.

To the south, daily records fell Wednesday across a large swath of the region accustomed to milder weather.

The temperature dropped to 18 degrees Fahrenheit in Birmingham, Ala., early Wednesday, breaking the previous low record of 22 degrees Fahrenheit set in 1911. More than 100 other sites in Alabama also reached historic lows for the day, officials said.

In Greenville, Miss., the temperature dropped to 17 degrees Fahrenheit, breaking a record of 23 degrees Fahrenheit set 108 years ago, officials said.

Even the Gulf Coast saw temperatures below freezing, producing “sea smoke” as chilly air moved over warmer water.

The cold air followed heavy snow that reached as far south as Tennessee.

Slippery conditions were blamed for road deaths since Monday in Michigan, Kansas and Ohio. In southwestern Michigan, a man died Tuesday after getting trapped beneath machinery he was using to clear snow from his marijuana grow business.