Frozen
nation: At least 10 dead as cold, ice and snow grip U.S
7
December, 2013
ARKANSAS - At
least 10 deaths — including three in California — were blamed on
the deep freeze that continued to grip the U.S. on Friday, canceling
hundreds of flights and leaving hundreds of thousands of people
without power.
The Santa Clara County, Calif., Sheriff’s Office
said hypothermia — an extremely low body temperature — had killed
three people since frigid conditions rolled in late Wednesday, NBC
Bay Area reported.
An earlier report from the medical examiner’s
office said four people had died, but it included a person who was
found dead last week, before the current weather system hit the
region.
With icy conditions stretching almost coast to coast, the
cold blast was blamed for deaths as far east as Indiana, where a
woman died in a four-vehicle crash in Wayne County, and as far south
as Arkansas, where an ice-coated tree fell on the camper housing a
62-year-old man in Pope County, authorities told NBC News.
By
midday, five states had
recorded at least 2½ feet of snow since Wednesday. The highest total
was 35 inches, near Two Harbors, Minn. Winter storm warnings covered
parts of Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky and
Ohio. The manager of a Home Depot store in Dallas concluded: “It’s
almost like a Black Friday. But I guess we’ll call it an Ice
Friday.”
Only a slice of the East Coast was spared the winter
blast.
Elsewhere, the story was ice, snow and brutal cold. Big Sky
Country woke up to double-take temperatures. It was 23 degrees below
zero in Laramie, Wyo., and felt like 41 below. In Helena, Mont., the
mercury fell to 10 below, with a wind child of minus-29.
The big
chill extended to parts of the country much less accustomed to it.
Parts of Nevada were at 18 below zero, and parts of Oregon were at 9
degrees. In Flagstaff, Ariz., the temperature just before dawn was 7.
Even “sunny” Southern California wasn’t being spared — the
National Weather Service issued winter storm warnings for Riverside
and San Bernardino counties beginning Saturday morning.
Farmers
pumped water into the soil to keep it from freezing and used wind
machines to blow mild air across the citrus crop, most of which is
still on the vine. Citrus in California is a $2 billion industry.
Lettuce and avocados were also in danger.
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