
"A massive nor'easter developing Saturday off the Carolina coast will power up the Eastern Seaboard, just one week after the strongest winter storm in four years dumped mounds of snow across Southern New England. Around noontime on Saturday, low pressure east of Cape Hatteras will begin to rapidly strengthen, undergoing bombogenesis, to become a very intense Atlantic winter storm. But it looks like New England will escape its full fury."
"Cape Cod and the Islands will be impacted the most by this weather system, but even there, the impact will be nothing remarkable. Forecast snowfall * 3 to 6 inches - For Cape Cod and Martha's Vineyard, you can expect 2 to 5 inches of snow with some isolated 6-inch amounts possible for Nantucket if the storm doesn't move too far to the east."
A massive nor'easter will develop Saturday off the Carolina coast and rapidly strengthen through bombogenesis around noontime. The most intense portion will remain over the ocean, keeping the core south and east of New England. Cape Cod and the Islands will receive the greatest effects but impacts will be modest. Forecast snowfall: 3 to 6 inches for Cape Cod and Martha's Vineyard; 1 to 3 inches for the South Shore, Plymouth, and parts of Rhode Island; a coating to 1 inch in eastern Essex County, Boston, and Providence. Areas west of I-495 should see little to no snow. Snow will begin between 2 and 5 a.m. Sunday on the Cape.
Read at Boston.com
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