
South:
A nasty combo of snow, sleet and freezing rain will roll out of Oklahoma overnight and target parts of Arkansas, southern Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia and North Carolina.
Precipitation may fall mostly as heavy snow over northern Arkansas and northern Tennessee on Friday where some 6-to-10-inch accumulations are possible.
South of the snow area, look for a significant amount of sleet and freezing rain. This wintry mess will spread eastward from southern Oklahoma and parts of northern Texas across central and southern Arkansas, southern Tennessee, northern Mississippi and northernmost Alabama.
The Little Rock and Memphis metro areas could see sleet and freezing rain with more ice just to their south.
Destructive ice coatings will continue eastward across parts of southern Tennessee including areas near Huntsville and Chattanooga.
Highs Friday will range from the 20s in the Texas Panhandle, Oklahoma and northern Arkansas to the 70s in Florida.
By Friday night and Saturday, heavy 6-to-10-inch snow will shift into the southern Appalachians of Tennessee and North Carolina and then continue eastward across the southern Virginias and northern and western North Carolina.
Raleigh could deal with a sleet storm but at least sleet but that will be less burdensome than freezing rain.
Charlotte could see significant sleet and freezing rain Saturday. Also, some sleet and freezing rain could bleed south in to north Georgia and northern South Carolina. Some freezing rain may make it down to the north and northeast suburbs of Atlanta by Saturday morning.
The Deep South will have to deal with heavy rain and thunderstorms, mainly from central and eastern Texas early Friday into South Carolina, Georgia and northern Florida by Saturday.
The storm will move into the Atlantic Sunday leaving the South cold with temperatures 5 to 15 degrees below average, ranging from the 30s north to the 50s along the Gulf Coast and near 70 in extreme southern Florida.
Northeast:
Low pressure sliding up to the Canadian Maritimes will funnel some very cold air into the Northeast Friday.
Snow will linger in northern Maine with several inches expected.
Lake-effect snow will intensify off of Lakes Erie and Ontario. Parts of the southern Tug Hill will see over a foot of snow. Significant amounts may also pile up along the south and southeastern shore of the Lake Ontario. A waterspout wrapped in snow was spotted just east of Rochester, N.Y., on Thursday.
Friday highs will range from the single digits across northern portions of New York, Vermont and New Hampshire to the 30s in Virginia. wind chill temperatures will be well below zero.
On Saturday, the storm will brush by to the south.
The snow will fall south of the Mason-Dixon Line with the heaviest across southern Virginia where accumulations of over 6 inches are likely. Cities like Danville, Richmond, and even Norfolk should prepare for significant snow.
The southern suburbs of Washington could be brushed by a bit of snow on the extreme northern end of the storm.
Midwest | View Regional Video
Friday will be snowy from Kansas to Kentucky with arctic air firmly entrenched across the region. Snow will linger into Saturday mainly across Kentucky.
Parts of southern Kansas, southern Missouri and southern Kentucky could see accumulations over 6 inches.
Some lake-effect snow will continue across northern Michigan.
Temperatures will be 5 to 20 degrees below average across most of the Midwest.
Lows Friday morning will range from between -10 and -20 across the eastern Dakotas and Minnesota to the teens and low 20s in Missouri and Kentucky.
Friday highs will range from the single digits and lower teens across the eastern Dakotas, Minnesota, Wisconsin and northern Michigan to the 20s across the lower Midwest. western Nebraska could flirt with 40 degrees, however.
Sunday will be quiet across the Midwest except for snow showers off the lakes across parts of Michigan.
West:
The next Pacific storm will begin to bring rain and mountain snow into western Washington, western Oregon and northern California Friday.
Rainfall amounts will generally be on the light side, however.
Snow levels will range from around 3000 feet in the Washington Cascades to around 5500 feet in northern California.
The rest of the west looked dry with seasonable temperatures.
Highs will range from the teens in northeast Montana to near 50 west of the Cascades and the 60s and near 70 across the lower elevations of Southern California and southern Arizona.
On Saturday, the rain and mountain snow will slide eastward from Washington, Oregon and northern California into Idaho and northern Nevada.
By Sunday, a little light snow will shift into the Rockies.
More rain will fall next week over parts of Washington, Oregon and the northern two-thirds of California.