- No culprit found five years on from Notre Dame fire
- Reeking mud sparks health fears in Spain flood epicentre
- Bogusz goal edges LAFC past Whitecaps in MLS playoffs
- N. Korea jams GPS signals, affecting ships, aircraft in South
- Indonesia volcano catapults vast ash tower into sky
- Cavs ride huge first half to crushing win over Warriors
- Over 130 homes lost in California wildfire as winds drop
- New tools give researchers hope for fungus-ravaged US bats
- Germany marks 1989 Berlin Wall fall with 'Preserve Freedom' party
- Heat, air pollution, disease: How climate change affects health
- Boeing to face civil trial over 2019 MAX crash
- Over 130 homes lost in California wildfire as winds abate for now
- 'No excuses', says Farrell after All Blacks end Irish home win streak
- Furious de Zerbi talks of leaving after Marseille lose to Auxerre
- UK rules drivers on Bolt ride-hailing platform are employees
- US stocks hit fresh records as European bourses retreat
- McKenzie boots All Blacks to victory over sloppy Irish
- Star striker Mekhloufi symbol of Algerian struggle dies at 88
- Marseille lose further ground in title race with Auxerre loss
- Climate crusader to vaccine skeptic RFK Jr to 'Make America Healthy Again'
- US announces charges in alleged Iranian plot to assassinate Trump
- Daughter of missing Mexico environment defender pleads for global help
- After Trump victory, EU leaders vow 'urgent' economic reform
- Death toll from Mozambique election protests rises to at least 30
- Beyonce leads Grammy nods after trailblazing country album
- Elon Musk took part in Trump-Zelensky call: Ukrainian official
- Gatland 'relishes the pressure' with struggling Wales
- Villa's Emery aiming high despite mini-slump
- Zheng to play WTA Finals decider after beating Krejcikova in the semis
- Gauff sets up decider with Zheng at WTA Finals
- PSG to curb political slogans in wake of 'Free Palestine' banner
- Yankees keep Boone as manager for 2025 MLB season
- Samson and leg-spinners earn crushing T20 win for India against South Africa
- Israeli football fans home after 'frightening' Amsterdam violence
- Jewish students block Austria far-right parliament speaker at Holocaust memorial
- Spain's grim search for flood missing moves to coast
- European businesses brace for Trump return
- 11 bodies found in Mexico truck were of missing group: prosecutors
- Germany's embattled Scholz open to talks on early election
- UN peacekeepers say Israel army damages south Lebanon position
- Toll from Mozambique election protests up to at least 30
- Superstar Dupont raring to go for France return
- First flight with Israelis evacuated from Amsterdam lands in Tel Aviv
- Resilient but threatened, Kenya celebrates Maa culture
- Van Nistelrooy accepts Man Utd lack a clinical striker
- Maresca says Chelsea can beat 'any team'
- Kolisi on the bench as Springboks ring changes for Scotland clash
- Israeli football supporters back home after Amsterdam violence
- Stock markets waver after US election rally, rate cut
- Guardiola will 'solve' Man City's malaise
Historic 'bomb cyclone' freezes North America
The extreme cold weather hitting North America in the run-up to Christmas holidays is due to a phenomenon called a "bomb cyclone".
The US National Weather Service said this "once in a generation type event" has the power to turn deadly and is already breaking cold-weather records -- with temperatures falling to minus 53 degrees Celsius (minus 63 Fahrenheit) in western Canada, minus 38 in Minnesota and minus 13 in Dallas.
It's even snowing in subtropical northern Florida.
A bomb cyclone, or bombogenesis, is a quickly intensifying storm that occurs when air pressure drops 20 millibars or more within 24 hours.
This usually happens when a warm air mass collides with a cold one, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
This time air from the Arctic ploughed into tropical air from the Gulf of Mexico, forming a depression bringing rain and snow.
What makes this storm extraordinary is just how fast the pressure dropped -- 40 millibars in 24 hours, according to meteorologist Yann Amice of analysts Weather'n'co.
"This has led to the development of extreme storm conditions near the core of the low pressure system, with particularly harsh conditions," said Cyrille Duchesne, a meteorologist from the French Weather Channel.
The unprecedented nature of this storm comes from the intensity and extremity of its low temperatures, Duchesne said.
"That's what makes it exceptional," he said.
The storm has sparked a "polar vortex plunge" where a particularly cold air mass from the Arctic heads south toward the lower, warmer latitudes.
The result is a vertiginous drop in temperatures -- in Denver, for example, temperatures dropped 33 degrees Celsius in barely seven hours.
Combined with blizzards and snow, the wind chill in regions like the Great Plains can make it feel like minus 55 degrees.
The US National Weather Service warned that such cold can lead to frostbite on exposed skin within a matter of minutes, hypothermia and even death if exposed to these conditions for too long.
This makes travel of any kind "dangerous" and even "impossible", it added.
This weekend the low pressure currently hanging over the Great Plains and Midwest should move north towards Quebec, likely bringing strong winds and heavy snow before moving on to the northeastern US, which should not be quite so severely affected, Duchesne said.
P.Costa--AMWN