The Day

A full month into winter, snow may finally be on the way here

Major storm brewing, but it’s still too soon to tell where it will end up

- By SETH BORENSTEIN AP Science Writer

Washington — Tens of millions of Americans from Washington to Boston and the Ohio Valley could be walloped by an end-of-the-week snowstorm, meteorolog­ists say.

Although it’s still early, computer forecast models all see a windy, strong, slow-moving storm. The big questions are where and how much.

“There’s going to be a big storm. Somebody’s going to get walloped,” said Victor Gensini, a meteorolog­y professor at College of DuPage outside of Chicago, which should be spared. “It does look like it’s going to be a doozy.”

Rich Otto, lead forecaster at the National Weather Service’s Weather Prediction Center outside of Washington, said some major cities will likely see a foot or more of snow. Other meteorolog­ists talked about 18 inches, 2 feet and more.

Gensini said the heavy snow is likely because the system will be slow moving. Forecaster­s see Saturday as the worst day in the East.

Early Tuesday, the Weather Prediction Center said the storm could be historic, but Otto said that may have been going a bit too far.

“Things will change; that’s a guarantee,” Otto said. “Nothing ever stays the same with these forecasts.”

Otto said an upper- level disturbanc­e in the air is moving from the Pacific to the Rockies to the southern plains. It should pass over Texas, hit the Ohio Valley, join with other unstable air and become a nor’easter Friday evening over the Mid Atlantic, moving up the coast on Saturday.

“Since the storm is arriving on a southern track, impacts will include Kentucky, Cincinnati, West Virginia, Northern Virginia into D.C., then Philly,” said meteorolog­ist Ryan Maue of the private WeatherBel­l Analytics.

Then once it gets up north, expect strong winds — gusting easily to 50 to 60 mph — beach erosion, and storm surge in the New Jersey area, Maue said.

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