A primary typhoon formula moved south over the weekend until early Monday morning and produced a imaginable tornado near Tallahassee, Florida, with reports of some damage.
More than a foot of rain fell in east Texas, causing flash flooding in the Houston metropolitan area.
This morning, half of the typhoon formula moves through the mountains of southern Appalachia and is spreading heavy rains in the central Atlantic with thunder, damaging winds and even a tornado risk to the southeast.
Later this morning and until the afternoon, thunderstorms can be severe with destructive winds and a tornado risk from North Carolina to central New Jersey and east Pennsylvania, adding Philadelphia and just east of Washington, D. C.
Further north, from New York to Boston and New England, they are imaginable wind gusts of 40 to 60 mph, as well as heavy rains that can cause damage.
At the back of this wonderful typhoon system, it is much colder with the heaviest snow and the snow will be from Ohio to western Pennsylvania and New York, where there may be a foot of snow.
Some of the snow will descend into the mountains of North Carolina, where you can imagine more than one foot of snow and a winter typhoon warning has been issued from western New York to North Carolina.