By Thursday, Massachusetts residents can expect to feel temperatures in the mid-to-upper 20s in most of the state, with temperatures in the 30s on the coast, and on Cape Cod and the Islands, according to the National Weather Service.
The National Weather Service changed several of its winter weather terms in October 2024. Here is what they new terms mean.
Another new change is the Wind Chill Advisory will be renamed to "Cold Weather Advisory" as shown below with the explanation. The hard freeze watches and warnings will be renamed and consolidated to "Freeze Watch" and "Freeze Warning" as shown below with the explanation.
Snow fell all over the Augusta area along with many other parts of Georgia on Tuesday. How much? How does this compare to the Jan. 10 winter storm?
The NYC area could see significant snow this weekend for the first time in years, with "the potential for up to 6 inches." Here's the forecast.
The NWS and NOAA have made changes to several cold weather alerts this past fall. Some of the coldest air we have felt across NEO in years is expected early next week.
The National Weather Service warned the Citizen Times that extremely low wind chill values could lead to frostbite, hypothermia.
Wind chill watches, warnings get new names from National Weather Service In 2024 ... internal body temperature," NOAA said. "Regardless of wind speed, no frostbite can occur with air ...
The U.S. secretary of commerce oversees the smallest but arguably most complex of all Cabinet-level departments. Established as a distinct entity in 1913, it has evolved into a sprawling organization with 13 bureaus spanning a wide variety of critical areas that include weather forecasting,
It wouldn't be January in New Jersey without unpredictable winter weather, with snow squalls, rain, high winds and fluctuating temperatures expected.
The National Weather Service has simplified some of its winter weather alerts for Wind Chill and Extreme Cold Warnings.
Meteorologist Tommy House sat down with Meteorologist Paul Yura, Warning Coordinator at the National Weather Service in San Antonio/Austin, to discuss ways to stay informed when severe weather is