Multiple North Texas counties, including Collin, Dallas, Denton and Tarrant, remained under a flood watch Thursday morning. The National Weather Service in Fort Worth scheduled the watch to expire at noon.
Record-breaking rain drenches DFW, causing major flooding. How much more could we see before it finally clears out?
From gray and wet to sunny and warm—early spring, here we come! North Texas will see heavy rain and gusty winds before a warm, spring-like weekend.
The wind chill Tuesday morning was projected to be in the low teens according to the National Weather Service’s Fort Worth office.
On Tuesday at 2:17 a.m. a dense fog advisory was issued by the National Weather Service in effect until 9 a.m. for Marengo and Dallas counties.
DALLAS - The cool and cloudy skies in North Texas will eventually turn rainy, especially later in the week. According to the FOX 4 Weather team, Tuesday will be cloudy with isolated showers and highs in the upper 50s. Tuesday is still mostly dry with the chance for showers increasing to about 30% overnight into Wednesday.
A storm system moving through the Dallas-Fort Worth area is expected to bring heavy rain, scattered showers, and thunderstorms, prompting the National Weather Service to issue a flood watch for parts of North Texas, including Collin, Dallas, Denton, Rockwall, and Tarrant counties.
Below-freezing temperatures are expected to arrive Saturday night in North Texas as the region is blasted with arctic cold air.
Next week doesn't look record cold and right now it doesn't even look as cold as we were around 1 year ago. Just another typical winter arctic front headed to North Texas. Certainly very cold, but nothing unheard of for mid to late January. #wfaaweather pic.twitter.com/5BoCVUA04e
Schools aren't closed in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex but some after-school events have been canceled due to the dangerously cold temperatures. Dallas ISD on Tuesday canceled all outdoor athletics events and practices. The school district said indoor events will continue as scheduled.
The National Weather Service issued a winter weather advisory at 2:03 p.m. on Monday valid from Tuesday 6 a.m. until Wednesday 6 a.m. for Marengo and Dallas counties.
The amount of rain that accumulated at DFW International Airport broke a daily record, according to the weather service.