More than 170 million people across the United States, from the Mexican border to the Canadian border are under cold weather alerts ahead of a crippling winter storm expected to sweep through the south from Texas to Georgia, including the Gulf Coast.
The storm – in combination with frigid air – will bring early this week historic snowfall, freezing rain, icy roads and other major travel disruptions to southern cities where harsh winter weather is rare.
The storm is taking place amid a wider extreme winter spell across the country, originating from an Arctic blast moving south from Canada and dropping temperatures 20 to 30 degrees below average across most of the Rockies, Central and Eastern US.
Across the North, multiple cities like Chicago, Minneapolis, Detroit, New York City, Washington, DC, Boston and Philadelphia could go days without seeing a high temperature climb above freezing.
Southern cities like Houston, Atlanta, Jackson, Mississippi, and Memphis, Tennessee, could also see highs below freezing Monday or Tuesday. This prolonged period of cold temperatures could lead to pipes bursting.
Large cities like Austin and San Antonio in Texas and Kansas City could even see record low temperatures, with Kansas City facing a potential Tuesday low of minus 10.