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A fast-moving nor’easter dumped snow on New York City and other major Northeast metropolitan areas Tuesday, knocking out power and disrupting travel, work and school. Here’s the latest: ...
Snow continues to pile up across the Northeast as a quick-hitting nor’easter slams the region. Totals have soared into the double-digits from eastern Pennsylvania to Connecticut.
On Jan. 28-29, 2022, a nor’easter buried parts of the region under snow and even touched off blizzard conditions. Cold air in place in 2022 turned all precipitation into snow.
Yet another nor'easter is tearing through the Northeast, bringing heavy snow and gusty winds to Washington, D.C.; Philadelphia and New York this afternoon.
How much snow will fall from the nor’easter The Northeast and New England are notorious for experiencing winter storms that can last 24 hours or more, but this one will be a quick hitter.
BOSTON - The March Nor'easter is heading out to sea, another one in the books. If you want to be a meteorologist there is no place more challenging, humbling and rewarding than New England.
A nor’easter is a coastal storm with winds out of the northeast. Nor’easters are notorious for bringing huge impacts such as heavy rain, snow, strong winds, power outages and coastal flooding.
Spring kicked off with a wallop of wintry weather along the East Coast as the fourth nor'easter in three weeks dumped more than a foot of snow in some places Wednesday.
A large and long-lasting Nor'easter storm is hitting the Northeast U.S. on Tuesday, bringing more than a foot of snow to some areas — with much more expected.
By Thursday afternoon, snow is expected across the mid-Atlantic and up the I-95 corridor from Washington, D.C., to New York City. Several hours of heavy snow are possible before the powder melts ...
Over the last 22 years Syracuse has had only one measurable snowfall on Easter, which was April 8th 2007. There were two other years where a trace amount of snow was recorded.
Weather Here’s Dave Epstein’s nor’easter forecast We should be prepared for the unexpected with a storm this powerful. Jonathan Wiggs / The Boston Globe, File ...