RIVIERA BEACH, Fla. — A polar vortex that has hit much of the United States with ice and snow has dealt a glancing blow to Florida, dropping coastal temperatures and causing the Sunshine State’s manatee population, still recovering from a mass ...
The National Weather Service (NWS) has issued urgent weather warnings for several counties across the state, with temperatures dropping below freezing and wind chills reaching dangerously low levels.
According to the National Weather Service office in Fort Worth ... Although Florida is not going to see biting cold temperatures or multiple inches of snow, the polar vortex is still going ...
(AP) — A polar vortex that has hit much of the U.S. with ... Public viewing areas are located near power plants in Riviera Beach, Fort Myers and Apollo Beach. Dozens of the sea cows, which ...
A polar vortex that has hit much of the U.S. with ice and snow has dealt a glancing blow to Florida and its manatee population RIVIERA BEACH, Fla. -- A polar vortex that has hit much of the U.S ...
Manatees Congregate in Warm Waters Near Power Plants as US Winter Storms Graze Florida RIVIERA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — A polar vortex that ... in Riviera Beach, Fort Myers and Apollo Beach.
RIVIERA BEACH, Fla. — A polar vortex that has hit much of the U.S. with ice and snow has dealt a glancing blow to Florida, dropping coastal temperatures and causing the Sunshine State's manatee ...
It's like "bomb cyclone" or "firenado." It seems like the sort of phenomenon that would be responsible for the record-breaking blast of cold, snow and wintry conditions that reached all the way to the Gulf Coast this week.
Frigid temperatures are keeping snow on the ground in parts of the South as some cities in the North report dangerously low temperatures. CBS News Pittsburgh's Erika Stanish reports, and Skyler Henry has more from Tallahassee,
A winter storm sweeping through the U.S. South on Tuesday was dumping snow at levels millions of residents haven’t seen before.
All-time record snowfall blanketed the Mobile area on Tuesday. Footage from Noah Scheeler shows the campus of the University of South Alabama draped in a thick winter coat, as snow continued to fall in the region.
When people woke up this morning, they expected to find blankets of snow covering the ground and making the area look like a winter wonderland, but instead, they were left disappointed. For days leading up to Sunday’s predicted snowstorm that was cast to bring up to 10 inches of snow,