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Millions will once more be forced to brace for severe weather conditions as snow, flash floods and a possible tornado are predicted to center on the south and east of the nation.
Swathes of the country are poised to see the return of heavy winds, rain and ice as a storm risk passes through Texas and into Oklahoma, Arkansas, Mississippi and Louisiana.
Severe forecast radars show rain and strong winds, in some case up to 40mph, moving east through the country towards Toronto and out towards the Atlantic.
FOX Forecast Center reported that winds may briefly turn severe, bringing damaging winds and potentially a tornado back to the Lone Star State which is still recovering from ice storms last week.
Texas especially is recovering from severe weather conditions that last week put 40 million people from Texas and Oklahoma to Kentucky in the path of the freezing weather and left 250,000 without power.
Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas can tomorrow expect up to two to three inches of rain as the trend sweeps east and temperatures fall to freezing by the end of the week.
Arctic winds brought temperatures to record lows before the weekend, with a windchill value of -108F in New Hampshire and -45F in Maine.
National Weather Service map shows the storm moving east across Texas on 6 February
Energy crews work on electric line repairs after ice storms and freezing rain in San Antonio
A leaning utility pole on Harmon Avenue in Austin, Texas, during a winter storm last Thursday
The threat of floods in the south is likely to increase on Tuesday evening and into the early hours of Wednesday, stretching from Indianapolis to New Orleans.
The Storm Prediction Center says isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible Tuesday afternoon and night across parts of east and southeast Texas to Louisiana and possibly southwest Mississippi.
The Hazardous Weather Outlook predicts damaging winds to be the main threat on Tuesday.
Heavy rainfall and localized flash flooding is possible, mainly along and east of I-35.
Colder air will bring snow to Kansas, Iowa and Wisconsin on Wednesday before the storm moves east out to the ocean on Thursday.
The north of the country may also weather a storm from Friday.
Weather outlooks below see the return of severe weather and thunder over the eastern half of Texas and straying into neighboring states before moving east on Wednesday.
Tuesday sees a revived prediction of severe weather and thunder centering on the coastline
Second day weather prediction shows the storm moving east and slowly out of the state
Texas remains most affected by severe weather conditions caused by an Arctic cold passage moving south and clashing with warm air from the Gulf of Mexico.
Residents in Austin are still without power as the state capital recovers from a winter storm last week.
Conditions improved from Friday 3 February as warmer winds prevailed, but nearly 35,000 people still remain without power as of 6 February according to poweroutage.us.
At the time of writing, Arkansas is the only other US state with more than 10,000 recorded customers without power.
But dangerous arctic air returned on Saturday, sinking windchill temperatures to a record-setting -108F (-78C) in the north-east and wind speeds of 89mph.
Winds on Friday caused a branch to fall on a moving car in Massachusetts, seriously injuring the driver, 23, and killing the infant onboard.
At least ten deaths have been attributed to the storm so far.
Image shows rain and wind predictions as far south as Texas while freezing rain hits the north
Traffic sits at a standstill along westbound I-20 near Cedar Ridge Drive and Loop 408 in Dallas
More than 40 million people from Texas and Oklahoma to Kentucky and West Virginia were warned of ice and wind chills of 50 degrees below zero
Boston Harbor pictured on 4 February as temperatures fell to all-time lows with wind chills
In Austin, video last week showed transformer explosions, which left 120,000 Austin Energy customers without power as of Wednesday morning.
Emergency responders rushed to hundreds of auto collisions across Texas on Tuesday and Republican Governor Greg Abbott urged people not to drive.
Airlines canceled over 1,800 flights in the United States on Wednesday, after an ice storm hit states from Texas to West Virginia.
A total of 1,897 flights within, into, or out of the United States were canceled, while 750 flights were delayed as of 8.41am ET, according to flight-tracking website FlightAware.
'This week's winter storm is having an impact on our operations, accounting for a significant number of cancelations,' American Airlines Group Inc said in a statement, adding that it proactively canceled flights and notified passengers.
The FAA on Tuesday warned in a tweet travelers could expect to see some snowy conditions in certain areas including Dallas, Fort Worth, and Memphis.
A multi-vehicle fatal accident occurred on the Ben White Boulevard on ramp at South First Street, in Austin, Texas, during an ice storm on Tuesday 31 January 2023
Ice pancakes and ice balls from Lake Ontario flow into Irondequoit Bay in New York State
Residents in Boston woke up to the coldest morning since 1957 on Saturday.
The weather is caused havoc at Logan Airport where at least 60 delays and 10 cancelations were reported, according to Flight Aware. Freezing fuel pumps were the reason for at least some of the disruption.
Air temperatures in Eureka, Canada's northernmost Arctic weather station hovered at -41 as the north was swept up in the ice storm.