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Winter weather threatens holiday travel across the U.S. this weekend

Around 53 million people from South Dakota to New York are under winter weather alerts this weekend as travelers head home from Thanksgiving festivities.

A winter storm system is expected to intensify Saturday morning, bringing steady snow showers and creating potentially hazardous travel conditions across Illinois, Missouri, Iowa, Wisconsin and Michigan. Chicago, Minneapolis, Milwaukee, St. Louis, Indianapolis, Detroit and Roanoke, Virginia, are a few of the cities at risk through the weekend.

A winter wonderland in the Midwest

Snow showers will continue to fall over parts of the Midwest all day Saturday, with the most intense snowfall of 1 to 2 inches per hour expected in the afternoon and evening, combined with 35 mph wind gusts. Travel will be very difficult across the region.

Snow will gradually fade overnight, with a few lingering snow showers hugging Lake Michigan by Sunday morning. The highest snowfall totals will target parts of Iowa, Illinois, Missouri, Wisconsin, northern Indiana and Michigan, where 6 to 14 inches will be possible through early Sunday.

Snow-covered trees and a snow flurry seen in video on social media transformed Iowa City into a winter wonderland Saturday morning.

As of 2 p.m. Saturday, snowfall totals included a foot of snow in Stout, Iowa, 10 inches in Hazelton, North Dakota, and 10 inches in Hannibal, Missouri.

Pictures shared by the National Weather Service field office in Chicago on Saturday afternoon showed snow-covered roads across Illinois and Indiana.

“Snow will result in reduced visibility under 1 mile and snow covered roads which will make travel hazardous,” the weather service warned. “If you have to be out allow for extra travel time and don’t crowd the plows!”

Travelers make their way through Ronald Reagan Airport near Washington, D.C., on Nov. 26.Celal Gunes / Anadolu via Getty Images

Almost 5,000 flights traveling into, within and from the U.S. on Saturday evening were delayed, and 1,536 were canceled, according to FlightAware.com. A majority of these cancellations were at Chicago O’Hare International Airport, where more than 1,030 flights have been canceled and almost 800 delayed.

A ground delay of over four hours was issued at the airport Saturday morning due to snow or ice and is expected to persist until Sunday, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.

“Snow continues to spread across the area and is accumulating on roads,” the weather service said. “Expect conditions to continue to deteriorate through the afternoon with peak snow rates expected between 12 PM and 8 PM today. If traveling use caution and be prepared for slippery travel!”

Rain in the South

In the South, rain showers and thunderstorms are anticipated in parts of the Southern Plains and Lower Mississippi Valley. There is a marginal risk for severe weather across eastern Texas and Louisiana, where a storm or two may produce damaging wind gusts over 65 mph, 1-inch hail, lightning and a tornado or two. Houston, Dallas and Austin are included in this threat, where travel delays at local airports may be an issue.

Dallas Fort Worth International Airport had over 530 flight delays as of Saturday evening and 64 cancellations, according to FlightAware.com.

The line of rain and snow showers will shift into the eastern third of the country by sunrise Sunday. Snow will hug the interior Northeast, Appalachians and northern New England while rain is anticipated from the mid-Atlantic through the Southeast.

No severe weather is expected, but wet roads could slow down travel in major cities like Boston, New York, Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, Charlotte and Atlanta. Rain will gradually come to an end by Sunday night as the line moves offshore, with snow showers lingering along the eastern Great Lakes into early Monday. Snowfall totals in this area will range from 2 to 8 inches.

A cold week ahead

Cold Canadian air will filter in behind this storm system, with highs dropping 15 to 30 degrees below average throughout the Plains and the Rocky Mountains this weekend. Daytime highs will only make it into the single digits and teens across the northern Plains, and the 20s to 30s across the Midwest.

Overnight lows the next couple of nights will dip as low as the minus-10s across the northern Plains. Despite this chill, only a few overnight record lows will be threatened, in Quincy, Illinois, and Burlington, Iowa.

This cold air will expand through the upcoming week, with highs through Friday ranging 10 to 25 degrees below average along and east of the Rockies.

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