The ferocious nor’easter storm, an unusually large storm which blows in from the northeast and is characterised by heavy snowfall, hit suddenly bringing major travel routes to a standstill.
People in New Jersey were urged not to travel yesterday while New York was hit by the biggest snowstorm for two years.
Weather Channel meteorologist Domenica Davis said: “Some of the heaviest snow trended to the south, especially through south-eastern Massachusetts.
“This is where we could pick up five to eight inches along Cape Cod and through parts of Rhode Island as well.”
New York was in the firing line for three to five inches of snow before the storm swept off into the Atlantic last night, she added.
A Weather Channel spokesman said: “The Big Apple is going to get at least five inches, which would make this its biggest snowstorm in over two years.
“The system was named Winter Storm Lorraine by The Weather Channel.
“After a warm weekend in the city, this weather is likely to take some people by surprise.”
A clash between warm and cold air masses through the middle of the month will drive stormy conditions across the US, experts say.
Florida, Georgia and Louisiana are on alert for thunderstorms and the risk of tornadoes as the boundary between hot and cold triggers volatile weather.
Jim Dale, US weather correspondent and meteorologist for British Weather Services, said: “There is the potential for some more heavy rain and thunder across this region, and along the boundary of air masses, there could be a risk of tornadoes.
“However, in the immediate forecast, the northwest United States is going to see most of the rainfall through this week.”
A separate but smaller storm hitting the central Plains, the Midwest and the Great Lakes will bring a mixture of rain and snow.
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