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Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, and the Carolinas all saw up to six inches of snow fall overnight Sunday, pushing America's warmer-weather creatures firmly inside, save excited sledders and snowman-builders. The storm also took a toll in Louisiana, where two people died in traffic accidents caused by icy conditions.
Metro Atlanta and its 5 million residents arguably took the brunt of the storm, as lack of snow-removal equipment left the vast majority of side streets overlaid with an ice sheet as deep and hard as a hockey rink. Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines canceled 1,400 flights Monday,
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After many Southerners experienced the second unusually cold and snowy December in a row – including Atlanta's first white Christmas since 1882 – the warming trend predicted by long-range meteorologists at the National Weather Service has so far failed to appear. A regional high-pressure system over Greenland – the North Atlantic Oscillation, (below left) or "Greenland Block" – has thrown a wrench into
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The unusual winter conditions, especially in the South and parts of the mid-Atlantic, have renewed debates about manmade global warming, with many scientists saying the cold weather is proof of climate change and skeptics saying such global-warming hype has left many unprepared for one of the coldest and snowiest decades in 40 years.
"We haven't really seen a cessation of the cold in the South, and we haven't seen any evidence that the cold is going to disappear over North America," says Jonathan Martin, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Wisconsin, in Madison. "There's really no stop to the general pattern that's allowed air chilled at high latitudes to spill southward toward central and eastern North America."Across the South, motorists were having trouble navigating icy streets
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The governors of Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee declared states of emergencies, and most schools and colleges above the
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Georgia officials canceled the Sunday night inauguration gala for incoming Republican Gov. Nathan Deal over safety concerns, though Mr. Deal was still scheduled to be sworn in at a small ceremony Monday morning at the Capitol (at left in snow).
Rare wintry scenes with a Southern twist played out all over Atlanta. In
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The storm also illustrated the South's lack of preparedness for a deep chill trend. With few plows working side streets, and colder temperatures expected to hang around for days, Atlanta is likely need several days to get back on its feet, as commuting will remain treacherous on roads packed with hard ice.
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Source:
Christian Science Monitor, "South in icy grip, as latest winter storm defies warming predictions", by Patrick Jonasson, accessed January 11, 2011
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