Niagara Falls frozen by arctic chill

Reuters 2014-01-09

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ROUGH CUT (NO REPORTER NARRATION)

Still images show parts of the 176 foot (53.6.m) American Falls covered in ice and the area below the observation area frozen over.

A deadly blast of arctic air that shattered decades-old temperature records as it enveloped the eastern United States on Tuesday (January 8) caused Niagara Falls on the United States and Canadian border to become a winter wonderland.

The cold weather caused the Niagara River to form an "ice bridge" and freeze over. Large amounts of ice up river from the falls led authorities to issue a flash-flood warning for two islands in the area, according to local media reports.

The low of minus -20.55 degrees Celsius (5 Fahrenheit) at the National Weather Service office at Buffalo Niagara International Airport tied a record set in 1942. The wind chill dropped down to -33.33 Celsius (-28 Fahrenheit), The Buffalo News reported.

The record temperatures were caused when polar air mass wept over North America

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