Meanwhile it is +30F in Moscow, and -30F in the coldest place on earth, Norilsk, in Siberia within the Arctic circle
Record low temperatures forecast in Nth America
Record low temperatures are forecast in the midwest and northeast of the United States on Monday.
5
January, 2013
Forecasters
at the National Weather Centre predict temperatures around minus 23C
in Chicago.
Domestic
and international flights are cancelled or delayed at John F. Kennedy
airport in New York and also in Chicago, Boston and Philadelphia.
A
state of emergency was declared in New York and New Jersey after
heavy snow fell on Thursday.
The
New York Times said the temperature in Central Park was the
same as in Fairbanks, Alaska.
The
BBC reports residents were advised on Friday to stay indoors and
non-essential state employees in Connecticut, Massachusetts and New
Jersey were ordered to remain at home.
Some
commuter trains in New York city were on a reduced schedule.
At
least 11 deaths are blamed on the storm, named Hercules, including a
man in Philadelphia who was crushed on Friday by a 30-metre pile of
salt being prepared to treat roads.
Eastern
Canada is also hit badly: residents in many parts of Newfoundland
lost power on Saturday morning.
Temperatures
there plunged to minus 15C, but the wind chill reportedly made it
feel as cold as minus 35C.
Climatologist
David Phillips told the BBC the temperature in Toronto on Friday
morning, -24C, was the coldest in nine years.
A frozen waterfall in Michigan
US grapples with snow as
'polar vortex' of subzero
temperatures approaches
• 16
dead after storm drops heavy snow along north-east
• Midwest
braces for 'life-threatening' winds and cold
4
January, 2013
At
least 16 people died as a result of the
winter storm which hit the north-eastern US on Friday,
authorities said. But as the cleanup from near-blizzard conditions
continued, in temperatures as low as -9.4F (-23C), forecasters warned
of worse to come for the midwest on Sunday.
One meteorologist, Ryan Maue of Weather Bell, called the system of cold
air approaching the midwest a “polar vortex”. “All the
ingredients are there for a near-record or historic cold outbreak,”
he said. “If you're under 40, you've not seen this stuff before.”
The
temperature was predicted to fall as low as -31F (-35C) in parts of
Minnesota, with wind chill potentially making that feel like -69F
(-56C). In a region accustomed to brutally cold weather,
however, the
Green Bay Packers' NFL wild-card playoff game against the San
Francisco 49ers at Lambeau Field in
Wisconsin is expected to go ahead on Sunday evening, as the coldest
NFL game ever played. Forecasters said it would be -2F (-19C) at
kickoff (4.45pm ET) and -8F (-22C) by the fourth quarter.
Fans
– who
bought the remaining 40,000 tickets this week after the NFL
threatened to prohibit local TV from airing the game if the team was
unable to sell out –
were warned to take extra precautions, such as dressing in layers
and sipping warm drinks.
Delays
and cancellations continued to affect air and road transport. By
midday Saturday, nearly 1,000 flights had been cancelled and 4,200
delayed across the US. More than 180 flights out of O'Hare
International Airport, in Chicago, had been cancelled.
In
Minnesota, Governor Mark Dayton ordered schools closed across the
state for the first time in 17 years. In North Dakota, "life
threatening wind chills" were forecast through Tuesday morning.
Experts said that in such conditions, frostbite could set in on
exposed skin within five minutes.
Maue
added that though the cold spell approaching the midwest would last
for only a few days, “it raises the chances for future cold”
across the country.
The
NFL is watching such forecasts closely, as it has scheduled Super
Bowl XLVIII to be played on 2 February at MetLife Stadium in New
Jersey, the outdoor venue shared by the New York Jets and the New
York Giants. Contingency plans are in place to play the showpiece
game, which is usually staged at warm-weather venues or in domed
stadiums, on 1 or 3 February if necessary.
"Right
now for the winter we will have had two significant shots of major
Arctic air and we're only through the first week of January,” said
Maue. “And we had a pretty cold December.”
The
cold blast will also affect parts of the east coast still clearing
up from Friday's storm. Sally Johnson, a meteorologist at the
National Weather Service in Sioux Falls, said: "This one
happens to be really big and it's going to dive deep into the
continental US. And all that cold air is going to come with it."
"Six
inches fell in Central Park in New York City. Photograph: Steve
Remich/Corbis
Nearly
two feet of snow fell on some north-eastern areas on Thursday night
and into Friday,
causing widespread road and flight delays, closing schools on the
second day back after Christmas, and leading the governors of New
York and New Jersey to declare states of emergency. Cities from
Washington DC to Portland, Maine were affected; the heaviest snow
fell north of Boston. Nearly 18in fell in Boston itself and in parts
of New York state; Manhattan island, in New York City, recorded 6in
in Central Park.
Nearly
3,500 flights were canceled on Friday across the US; 12,400 were
delayed.
On the roads, deaths were reported in Michigan, Kentucky, Indiana
and Illinois. A worker was killed in Philadelphia when a pile of
rock salt fell on the machine he was operating, and authorities said
a 71-year-old New York state woman suffering from Alzheimer's
disease died after leaving her rural home.
Authorities
rescued a number of people from accidents caused by the ice and
snow. On Friday a man was rescued after falling through the ice at
Ramapo Lake in New Jersey. A police dive rescue team pulled
34-year-old Guncel Karadogan to safety and resuscitated him. He was
taken to a local hospital. In Monmouth, in the same state, fire
officials said three people were rescued after the Shrewsbury River
flooded on Friday morning.
In
New York City, the snow provided an immediate test for the
new mayor, Bill de Blasio, who took office on New Year's Day.
De Blasio, who in 2010 was one of the leading critics of his
predecessor, Michael Bloomberg, for allegedly prioritising the
clearing of Manhattan over the other four boroughs, was photographed
shovelling snow in front of his Brooklyn home.
Asked
about the snow-shovelling effort made by his 16-year-old son Dante,
who achieved a certain fame in the election campaign and who the
mayor's wife, Chirlane McCray, said would be sent out to work, de
Blasio said: “I give Dante an A for effort and a D for
punctuality."
New
York City transport was affected by the storm, with some highways
shut overnight and commuter services running on weekend or reduced
schedules, but by Saturday morning services were largely back to
normal. Over the Hudson River in New Jersey, Governor Chris Christie
closed state offices and courthouses and ordered non-essential
workers to stay home.
Authorities
warned the public to be ready for continuing low temperatures. The
governor of Massachusetts, Deval Patrick, said: "Temperatures
tonight and tomorrow are expected to be extremely low, and
dangerously so. These are dangerous conditions."
New
York City's Department of Homeless Services declared "code
blue", doubling patrols seeking those who needed shelter and
streamlining the check-in process for homeless shelters.
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