Deep freeze in North America
The coldest, most dangerous blast of polar air in decades gripped the US Midwest and pushed toward the East and South and eastern Canada on January 7, 2014, closing schools, grounding flights and forcing people to pull their hoods and scarves tight to protect exposed skin from nearly instant frostbite.
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The coldest, most dangerous blast of polar air in decades gripped the US Midwest and pushed toward the East and South and eastern Canada.
Ice in the Mississippi River flows past the Gateway Arch in St, Louis. As Missourians muddled through another frigid day Tuesday, the worst cold snap in nearly two decades was about to come to an end but many roads remained partly snow-covered two days after a winter storm dumped several inches of snow.
Photo credit: AP -
Ice covers rocks and brush on the break wall at Edgewater Park in Cleveland. An official low of -11 degrees broke the 130-year-old record for the date as cold polar air spread from the Midwest to southern and eastern parts of the U.S. and eastern Canada.
Photo credit: AP -
People go sledding following a snow storm in Prospect Park on January 4, 2014 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. The major winter snowstorm named 'Hercules', forced New York City public schools to close, cancelled hundreds of flights at airports and shut down the Long Island Expressway, is now bringing below freezing temperatures to the Midwest and mid-Atlantic and to the Northeast.
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In this image, ice builds up along Lake Michigan at North Avenue Beach as temperatures dipped well below zero on January 6, 2014 in Chicago, Illinois. Chicago hit a record low of -16 degree Fahrenheit on January 7 morning as a polar air mass brought the coldest temperatures in about two decades into the city.
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Ice from breaking waves coats a house along the shore in Scituate, Massachusetts on January 3, 2014. The winter storm slammed into the US northeast with howling winds and frigid cold, dumping nearly 2 feet (60 centimetres) of snow in some parts and whipping up blizzard-like conditions.