Frosty mix of snow, rain expected in NYC area this week

A frosty mixture of snow and rain is anticipated to coat the New York Metropolis space later this week as a robust storm system continues to maneuver throughout the nation.

“There will likely be combined precipitation [in New York] at some factors over the course of Thursday into the primary few hours of Friday,” FOX Climate meteorologist Christopher Tate informed The Put up on Tuesday morning. 

“The division between rain and snow goes to be actually near New York Metropolis itself,” he continued. “Anyone within the New York metro space will see snow. Right here within the metropolis, I feel will probably be predominantly rain.”

Increased elevations within the area can anticipate as much as 6 inches of snow earlier than the system ushers in a dry however chilly weekend chilly entrance.

“Sunday, we’ll have a tough time getting out of the 30s,” Tate stated.

FOX Weather meteorologist Christopher Tate told The Post that the city itself will probably see mostly rain.
FOX Climate meteorologist Christopher Tate informed The Put up that the town will most likely see principally rain.
Getty Photographs
A dusting of snow already briefly coated the city last weekend.
A dusting of snow already briefly coated the town final weekend.
Getty Photographs
A possible snow storm is expected to move into the New York area on Thursday.
A attainable snowstorm is anticipated to maneuver into the New York space on Thursday.

The storm’s New York arrival is the ultimate cease of a long-duration occasion that started in Alaska earlier than sweeping down the West Coast.

“[The storm] introduced rain and snow to the Pacific Northwest. It reduce throughout the Midwest,” Tate stated. 

Information of the storm comes as extreme climate batters elements of the central US, with elements of South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa and Minnesota experiencing heavy snow and wind.

In a message shared Monday, the South Dakota Division of Public Security known as the situations a “ ‘we're not kidding’ sort of storm.’”

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