Rain is likely to move into Indiana starting Thursday. The National Weather Service in Indianapolis breaks it all down.
Winter this year in the Midwest hasn't messed around. Central Indiana saw 15.7 inches of snow at the start of January, the bulk of which fell during a major winter storm. Sub-zero temperatures continued to chill the state throughout the month — freezing pipes and posing health risks from frostbite.
Black ice is especially dangerous because you often don't know you're on it until you start slipping. Here's what to do if that happens.
Bitterly cold temperatures are forecast across Indiana from 7 p.m. Sunday to 10 a.m. Wednesday, according to a cold weather advisory issued by the National Weather Service. By Monday, the daily high is expected to drop near 10 degrees, with wind chill indexes cold enough to cause frostbite on exposed skin within just 30 minutes.
A blast of Arctic air has dropped temperatures in Indiana considerably this week, but just how cold did it get around the state? And is this normal?
The National Weather Service issued an updated winter weather advisory at 9:21 a.m. on Sunday in effect until Monday at 9 a.m. for Higher Elevations of Indiana and Fayette County.
STATEWIDE–Temperatures and wind chill factors will be in the single digits across Indiana this weekend. “The coldest air will arrive, though, Monday and Tuesday of next week,” said Jason Puma, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Indianapolis. Puma says lows late in those evenings will be around 0.
NWS Indianapolis warns of hazardous weather, including freezing fog, sub-zero temps, and precipitation in Central Indiana.
INDIANAPOLIS — An extreme cold watch has been issued from the National Weather Service for all of central Indiana for Sunday night through Monday afternoon as dangerous wind chill values fall as cold as -25 degrees. Light, wintry precipitation will be ...
(WISH) — The National Weather Service on Friday afternoon issued extreme cold watches for parts of central and southern Indiana, and parts of Kentucky and Ohio. Both of the watches extend from ...
Students around the Louisville metro did not have to go out in single-digit temperatures Wednesday morning. Most school districts in the region opted for nontraditional instruction.
Indianapolis received 15.5 inches by storm's end. According to the National Weather Service, the Blizzard of '78 set other records, including the most snow in one month in Indianapolis (30.6 inches) and the most snow on the ground in Indianapolis (20 inches, which included 5 inches already on the ground from a snowstorm the previous weekend).