The intense cold snap about to settle over most of Canada and the U.S. has been dubbed a “polar vortex’, but Environment Canada Senior Climatologist David Phillips says it could just as easily be called “Arctic air or Siberian air.”
The most unusually cold air in the Northern Hemisphere will be over the United States early next week, bringing dangerously frigid conditions.
Some areas of the U.S. may see temperatures as low as -20 or -30 degrees early next week as arctic air from Siberia rolls in.
The polar vortex will soon elongate over North America with a dangerous cold moving into sections of Canada and the U.S.
The plunging polar vortex brought subfreezing temperatures ... along Texas’ border with Mexico, to 31 degrees, with an expected wind chill factor ranging from 0 to 15 degrees early Wednesday ...
The Arctic polar vortex has been pushing icy winds throughout ... States included parts of Texas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Utah and Colorado, as well as New Jersey, Pennsylvania ...
The NWS has issued the warnings as a powerful polar vortex continues to make temperatures plunge nationwide this week.
(AP) — The plunging polar vortex brought subfreezing temperatures ... along Texas’ border with Mexico, to 31 degrees (minus 0.5 Celsius), with an expected wind chill factor ranging from ...
However, a deep freeze, thanks to the polar vortex dipping down from Siberia, is about to bring even harsher arctic blast to nearly 300 million Americans starting this weekend. Maps show where and when the cold front will arrive.
A new blast of Arctic air sweeping from north to south will bring bone-chilling temperatures to millions of Americans this weekend and next week.
Over 120 million Americans will face extreme cold, with temperatures potentially reaching minus 40 degrees Celsius. Meteorologists warn that it will be colder than in Greenland. Due to the frigid weather,
More than 40% of Navajo Nation households don't have running water and have to haul it in, but a $2.2 billion pipeline project to solve that problem is $120 million closer to being fully funded. The Navajo-Gallup Water Supply Project will divert water from the San Juan River to provide it to 43 Navajo chapters,