A state of emergency has been declared across New York, after a fierce winter storm hit the eastern United States bringing heavy snow and freezing temperatures.
Storm Grayson has impacted millions along the East Coast, with states of emergency also in place in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina and Virginia.
Blizzard warnings are also in place from Virginia to Maine.
The extreme weather phenomenon – known as a "bomb cyclone" – is caused by a massive drop in pressure bringing with it hurricane force winds.
Seventeen deaths have so been blamed on the extreme weather, including two men killed when their pick-up truck overturned in North Carolina and a passenger who was unable to escape a vehicle that crashed through a railroad crossing 20 miles north of Philadelphia.
Hurricane force winds have led to power cuts in more than 100,000 homes and businesses across the north east of America.
Impromptu shelters and "warming areas" have been set up in many areas for those experiencing loss of power and burst water pipes.
The North Carolina Highway Patrol responded to 700 collisions and 300 other calls for service during the storm.
All flights were suspended from JFK Airport and LaGuardia Airport in New York, and the majority of flights were also severely affected in Newark Airport in New Jersey and Boston airport in Massachusetts.
Many schools were also closed and the Senate cut short its working week due to the extreme weather.
The storm even saw Florida experience its first snowfall in nearly three decades.
Unusually low temperatures in the state caused cold-stunned green iguanas to fall from the trees on to the ground.
Wildlife experts warned residents not to "assume that they are dead", and to be careful not to "threaten" the creatures which they said "may bite once they warm up".
Storm Grayson began over Christmas, when an Arctic air mass moved south across America's Great Lakes, colliding with warmer air over the Atlantic Ocean where it picked up power.
The storm will become even more ferocious as it roars up the East Coast, heading towards Canada.
Sky News US Correspondent Hannah Thomas Peter said: "Once this storm has passed, there is going to be another problem to deal with, which is a massive drop in temperatures across the north east.
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"It is going to be bitterly cold, and that's going to make recovery much harder."
Up to 30cm (12in) of snow is now expected in New York and 46cm (18in) expected to fall in eastern New England.
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Sky News
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