New Year's Eve will be marked by a major storm on the East Coast and "substantial" snow in New Mexico
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Celebrants traveling to New York City's Times Square on New Year's Eve make sure to have a raincoat or even a raincoat.
A major storm system is expected to create a deluge on the east coast Monday night until Tuesday. while revelers recount the last moments before the beginning of 2019.
"In accordance with the theme of 2018, we finish the year, the last hours of 2018 will be wet in the northeast," said Sunday the AccuWeather meteorologist Geoff Cornish. "The headquarters of American news." "We will unfortunately face a widespread rain on Times Square."
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The Weather Forecast Center of the National Weather Service said that a storm system was moving out of the western Gulf from Mexico and the lower Mississippi Valley will result in heavy rains in Alabama and Georgia, which may cause flash floods in some areas.
As the storm system moves east on Monday, the rain will grow in the Ohio Valley and in the northeast. Rainfall is expected between one and two inches and could be increased in some areas by thunderstorms.
"It could mean a wet New Year's Eve, but sweet, at midnight for Northeast party goers," the NWS said. ] Forecast weather conditions throughout the country at midnight on New Year's Day, revelers ringing in 2019. "/>
Forecasts for weather conditions across the country at midnight on New Year's Day , with the partygoers in 2019.
(National Weather Service)
This would be a stark contrast to last year, when the bullet had fallen in Times Square and the temperature was about 10 degrees with a real temperature of – 5 ° C.
Cornish said Sunday that temperatures will reach 45 degrees when the ball falls, but the weather will be very wet.
"It's hard to get ready for hours in the rain," he said.
Further south, the NWS said that much of Florida would remain protected from the rains to the north, which would allow temperatures to reach unprecedented highs by the end of December in the 1980s.
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Although the east coast is rather humid, the areas to the west will face colder precipitation. NM The NWS Albuquerque office stated that widespread snow, wind, blowing snow, freezing fog, low visibility and major impacts on the planned movements from Monday to New Year.
After the passage of the storm, an "extreme cold" should touch the area.
is expected to extend Monday east through the Dakota to Minnesota, along the Arctic border.
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