North America arctic blast creeps east

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Meterologist Jacqui Jeras: “The polar vortex is always out there”

North America’s brutal cold snap is heading east, ushering in dangerous temperatures not seen in two decades, warn forecasters.

From Montana to Maryland, about half of the US population has been placed under a wind chill warning or advisory.

In Canada, the province of Ontario is facing temperatures of -40C (-40F) with wind chill.

Thousands of flights have been grounded, and residents told their skin could freeze if they go outside._72116603_snow

People on the north-east coast were warned to brace on Tuesday for frigid temperatures, as the cold sweeps in from the Midwest.

Temperatures were set to plummet overnight in New York and Washington DC by as much as 45 degrees, from unseasonably clement highs a day earlier.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced that parts of major highways would be closed in preparation for the extreme weather, which could see the mercury plummet to -26C (15F) overnight with wind chill.

The polar blast was threatening crops and livestock across the American farm belt, even in the usually temperate Deep South.

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BBC Weather delves into the polar vortex

The sub-zero snap was expected to reach as far south as Texas and central Florida, the National Weather Service said.

Tennessee and Kentucky were forecast to receive several inches of snow.

The weather has been blamed for at least 16 deaths in recent days, including:

  • A one-year-old boy in Missouri who was killed in a car collision with a snowplough
  • A worker at a Philadelphia salt storage facility who died when a 100-ft (30-m) pile of road salt collapsed on him
  • An elderly Indiana woman who was found dead outside her home
  • An Oklahoma man who was killed when his vehicle skidded off an icy road
  • An elderly woman suffering from Alzheimer’s disease who froze to death after getting lost in New York state
  • Four men across Illinois who suffered fatal heart attacks while shovelling snow

Meteorologists said some 187 million people in all would be able to feel the effects of the cold snap by Tuesday.

It has been widely blamed on a shift in the weather pattern known as the “polar vortex”.

In Comertown, Montana, on Monday the temperature sank to -53C (-63F) with wind chill.

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Ice-breakers were deployed to Lake Michigan

The state of Minnesota saw the mercury plummet to -48C (-56F) by the same measure.

The South Pole, by comparison, and Irkutsk, Siberia, jointly basked in a relatively balmy -33C.

More than 4,500 US flights were cancelled just on Monday in the US because of the extreme weather.

JetBlue Airways suspended nearly all operations at airports in Boston and around New York City until midday on Tuesday.

The state of Minnesota and the city of Chicago, Illinois, have ordered all schools closed.

It was so cold that even the polar bear at Chicago’s Lincoln Park Zoo was kept indoors, 

Public parks were also shut as officials warned that exposed flesh could become frostbitten.

In Illinois, the National Guard used 10-tonne military vehicles to clear up after several lorries jackknifed, stranding nearly 400 vehicles. There were no fatalities or injuries reported in those incidents.

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US officials issued “deadly” cold weather warnings

Freezing rain also caused hundreds of flight cancellations at airports in Toronto and Ottawa.

Nearly 1,000 homes in Newfoundland, Canada, were still without electricity on Monday after a power outage.

Environment Canada senior climatologist David Phillips told the Globe and Mail newspaper: “The weather gods are out to punish you.”

Some parts of Canada could see as much as 23in of snow over just a few days, he said.

Ice builds up along Lake Michigan in Chicago, Illinois, on 6 January 2014
Ice builds up along Lake Michigan in Chicago, Illinois
A horse drinks water from a hole in a frozen water tank in Enid, Oklahoma, on 6 January 2014
A horse drinks water from a hole in a frozen water tank in Oklahoma
A woman snow blows her driveway in Springville, New York on 6 January 2014
A woman attempts to plough her driveway in New York
A woman pushes her daughter and their groceries through blowing snow in Saginaw Township, Michigan, on 6 January 2014
A shopper fights the elements in a grocery store car park in Michigan
A wrecked semi truck sat in a highway ditch in St. Joseph, Illinois on 6 January 2014
A lorry stranded in a ditch in Illinois
A worker cleared snow from a business in Muskegon, Michigan on 6 January 2014
A worker in Muskegon, Michigan, clears snow from the front of local businesses
Men surround a makeshift fire in Knoxville, Tennessee, on 6 January 2014
Homeless men use donated firewood to beat cold temperatures in Knoxville, Tennessee

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source BBCNEWS