Another Arctic front will hit the United States in the coming days, with snow and ice predicted for large parts of the country.
The storm is said to be blowing into parts of the Midwest and East Coast from the Southeast, according to the Weather Channel.
The National Weather Service has issued storm warnings for large areas of the country, including New Jersey, Virginia and Texas.
The Carolinas are expected to bear the brunt of Saturday’s storm, Charleston South Carolina releasing its first winter storm watch since January 5, 2018.
[WEATHER ADVISORY]: Due to Winter Storm Jasper, a travel advisory has been issued. See more info here: https://t.co/GgSa1WqULX
Your travel plans may be affected. Please check your current flight status here: https://t.co/yuPJDPxeNu pic.twitter.com/yrg2ZYmOlw
— Spirit Airlines (@SpiritAirlines) January 20, 2022
We're LIVE in the field and in the studio today with the latest on Winter Storm #Jasper.
Catch our coverage for what you need to know heading into this weekend! @mikeseidel is in Pennsylvania: pic.twitter.com/V3LloyEcxR
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) January 20, 2022
More snow is in the forecast this week!
Just how much are we talking? Get a look at what forecast models are predicting for your city TODAY on The Weather Channel. ❄️ pic.twitter.com/8iKnqxFvRW
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) January 19, 2022
The winter storm warning beginning Thursday afternoon has been expanded over parts of south Texas to include Victoria and Corpus Christi. pic.twitter.com/AnWfpuIIS5
— The Weather Channel (@weatherchannel) January 19, 2022
It's been a day since a winter storm walloped parts of Ontario, with some people still digging out.
The seemingly endless shovelling has left many, including this Toronto boy, exhausted.
Watch the full report: https://t.co/SeaRyfnwAX pic.twitter.com/J7jnRaujxJ
— CTV News (@CTVNews) January 18, 2022
With 9.3" of snow already having been measured in Nashville this month, this has become the snowiest January since 1985 and the 9th snowiest January overall. The record for January is 18.8" set in 1948. (January, 1985 was also the month we set our all-time record low of -17°.)
— NWS Nashville (@NWSNashville) January 19, 2022