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Lightning illuminates a house after a tornado touched down in Jefferson County, Alabama, damaging several houses, Friday, December 25, 2015. Photo: AP

Eastern US sees warm Christmas, while winter storm looms across the Plains

Much of the East Coast basked in unseasonable warmth on Christmas Day with record high temperatures set or tied in several cities, including New York, even as a tornado hit Alabama and a major winter storm loomed for the southern Rockies and Great Plains.

The twister in Birmingham, Alabama, late on Friday afternoon damaged several homes, uprooted trees and caused a handful of minor injuries, police and weather officials reported.

National Weather Service meteorologist Jody Aaron said the tornado damage appeared limited to the southwestern end of the city, the state’s largest in a region of the South that has been hit hard by three days by thunderstorms and torrential rain.

READ MORE: Mega blizzard aims at US Northeast

The most noteworthy weather phenomenon for most of Eastern Seaboard, meanwhile, was a continuing pattern of temperatures about 20 degrees above normal.

The temperature in Manhattan’s Central Park climbed to 19 degrees Celsius, the highest Christmas Day mark in at least 146 years, while Philadelphia topped out at a record-tying 18 degrees, according to the National Weather Service.

Women enjoy a warm day on their bikes in Central Park, New York on December 25, 2015. Photo: Reuters

Temperatures around Washington reached the upper 23 degrees, just a few degrees shy of record highs despite cloudy, damp weather. Both New York and Washington posted record warmth on Thursday, as well.

Above-average temperatures were expected to linger along the Eastern seaboard through the holiday weekend, with heavy rains falling across much of the South and mid-Atlantic region raising the possibility of flash floods.

Parts of Alabama were deluged by more than a foot of rain Wednesday evening through Friday afternoon, while Georgia also was soaked with nearly 12cm of precipitation measured at Atlanta’s airport, according to the Weather Service.

Motorists ford a water covered road in Decatur, Alabama on Friday. Photo: AP

But even as soggy conditions in the South begin to abate, a powerful winter storm was forming across the southern Rockies and Plains, threatening blizzard conditions for parts of New Mexico, Texas and Oklahoma on Saturday, forecasters said.

As much as 61cm of snow was possible in areas of New Mexico and northern Texas, they said.

Snow already was falling on Friday in parts of Nebraska, South Dakota and Minnesota, a region bisected by heavily travelled Interstate 90.

“This is coming at a bad time for travel,” said Richard Baan, a meteorologist for the Weather Prediction Center in College Park, Maryland.

Heavy rain, and possible flooding, was expected from the same system on Saturday in eastern Oklahoma, Arkansas, north-central Texas and Louisiana, Baan said.

READ MORE: Deadly tornado tears apart town in Mexico while storms hit the US

A separate winter storm in California’s Sierra Nevada brought more welcome relief to ski resorts struggling through a four-year drought that has left the mountain snowpack badly depleted. The two largest ski destinations near Lake Tahoe – the Heavenly Mountain Resort and Squaw Valley-Alpine Meadows – reported receiving 61cm and 48cm of snow, respectively, on Thursday and Friday.

Facing delays stemming in part from severe weather this week, package delivery company FedEx said it was manning customer counters with volunteers on Christmas Day.

A storm system on Wednesday set off tornadoes that killed at least 15 people in Tennessee, Arkansas and Mississippi. The Mississippi Emergency Management Agency said on Friday that two people were still missing.

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