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Long Duration Nor'Easter is creating major chaos on East Coast & 450 Rivers Flooding or Near stage

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Added by admin in Outer Space & Universe
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A Historic Destructive & catastrophic long duration Nor'easter is beginning to wreak havoc from Florida
all the way up to Nova Scotia with the worst impacts being flooded neighborhoods, storm surge, destroyed homes
major coastal flooding and mass power outages.
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articles on the situation

https://weather.com/storms/winter/news/2018-03-01-winter-storm-riley-noreaster-high-winds-coastal-flooding-heavy-snow

Winter Storm Riley Undergoing Bombogenesis Into a Strong Nor'easter With Damaging Winds, Coastal Flooding, and Heavy, Wet Snow in the East
Low pressure is now intensifying rapidly off the Northeast seaboard.
Damaging winds have already been reported from western New York to the mountains of North Carolina.
Coastal flooding and beach erosion will persist over multiple high tides into the weekend.
Heavy, wet snow will also continue in parts of the interior Northeast.
Te combination of high winds and wet snow will lead to widesp
read power outages that could last for days.
Low pressure just off the Jersey Shore is currently undergoing explosive development known as bombogenesis,
defined by a rapid drop in atmospheric pressure of at least 24 millibars in a period of 24 hours or less.
Thanks to a recent split of the polar vortex and a subsequent westward-shifting blocking high-pressure system near Greenland, the weather pattern will be conducive for this nor'easter to move very slowly.
This will produce high winds over a sizable swath of the East, and coastal flooding will reach moderate or major severity over multiple high-tide cycles into the weekend.
Cold air is limited but sufficient to produce heavy, wet snow along the northern flank of the low-pressure system in the interior Northeast.
Snow is spreading across the eastern Great Lakes and into upstate New York and northern Pennsylvania. Snow is spreading eastward through the Northeast and into the central Appalachians.
High wind warnings stretch from Maine to the southern Appalachians, including virtually the entire Interstate 95 urban corridor from Boston to Washington D.C.
These areas can expect to see wind gusts to 60 mph, with locally higher gusts, capable of downing trees and knocking out power.
The first to see these high winds will be the Appalachians and adjacent Piedmont.
By early Friday morning, these high wind gusts will spread into the Baltimore and Washington D.C. metro areas. Winds will also pick up farther north in the Philadelphia metro area during the day.
As the nor'easter intensifies Friday, winds will also sharply increase in New England, Long Island and the New York City Tri-State area, especially near the coast.
By Friday evening, some gusts over 70 mph are possible in far southeastern Massachusetts, including Cape Cod, Nantucket Island and Martha's Vineyard, Rhode Island and, perhaps, the Twin Forks of eastern Long Island.
Otherwise, occasional gusts to 60 mph may occur from southern Maine to the mid-Atlantic states and Appalachians into Saturday morning. These winds will slowly taper off during the day Saturday in these areas.
The high winds, combined with heavy, wet snow in the interior Northeast (discussed in the "rain/snow" section below), will likely down trees and trigger widespread power outages in the East.
Coastal Flooding/Beach Erosion/High Surf
These long-lived winds blowing over a long stretch of the ocean, piling onshore and persisting for several days, will lead to moderate to major coastal flooding along parts of the Northeast Seaboard. Coastal flooding could be life-threatening along the Massachusetts coast.
Coastal flood watches and warnings have been issued by the National Weather Service from southern Maine to North Carolina's Outer Banks. Widespread coastal inundation is likely on parts of the Massachusetts coast.

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