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Snow and ice causes disruption as cold spell continues

Large parts of the UK have been brought to a standstill by the early freeze

Further snow and freezing temperatures are causing major problems for road,

rail and air services in much of the UK, and thousands of schools are shut.

There are icy road warnings, and up to 15cm of snow could fall in some areas.

Many roads are gridlocked, some trains and buses have been cancelled, and

Gatwick and Edinburgh airports will be closed until at least Thursday morning.

The Met Office has issued heavy snow warnings for much of the eastern side of

Britain and some central areas.

Avalanche warning

In England, heavy snow warnings are in place for Yorkshire and Humber, the East

Midlands and north-east England.

In Scotland the warnings apply to Grampian, Central, Tayside and Fife,

Strathclyde, south-west Scotland, Lothian and Borders.

Thousands of Scottish children will have a third consecutive day off as many

councils keep schools closed.

Hundreds of skiers took to the slopes near Aviemore in the Cairngorms on

Tuesday, and an avalanche warning has now been issued.

WEATHER AND TRAVEL INFO

are available at BBC Travel News

website

Health website

Supt Chris Moon of Surrey Police said the county's conditions were the worst he

had ever seen and were likely to get worse. He said people should not travel

unless they had to, adding: "I have put out several severe weather warnings in

my career, but this one I really must stress."

Police have issued the same advice in Kent and in South Yorkshire. In Kent some

roads in the west and north of the county are impassable due to snow and ice.

Hospitals in South Yorkshire are asking patients not to attend unless it is

urgent, and they have asked off-duty medical staff to make their way into work

if possible.

Thousands of rail commuters face severe disruption to their journeys in

Scotland and northern England - particularly in the Sheffield area. London and

the south-east has also suffered, including delays and cancellations to

Southeastern services operating out of London Victoria and Charing Cross.

There are delays on the East Coast Main Line, with an hourly service between

London and Edinburgh, and reduced services between London and Leeds and London

and Newcastle.

Passengers face delays of up to an hour on Eurostar services.

BBC weatherman Liam Dutton said up to 10cm of snow could fall in East Anglia

and south-east England, with up to 15cm possible in north-east England and

south-east Scotland.

"Temperatures will be barely above freezing across the UK and when you add in

the effect of the wind chill, it will feel much, much, colder than that," he

said.

Overnight, temperatures hit a low of -20C in Altnaharra in the Highlands.

However, south-west England, Wales, western Scotland and Northern Ireland

should enjoy sunny spells.

Airports closed

On Tuesday across the UK, many commuters worked from home, thousands of

children could not go to school and motorists faced travel chaos as a number of

roads were impassable. The disruption on Wednesday includes:

closed until 0600 GMT tomorrow. Edinburgh Airport is also closed until at least

Thursday morning. Guernsey Airport, Robin Hood Airport in Doncaster and Durham

Tees Valley Airport are also shut, while other airports are disrupted.

Newcastle Airport has reopened. Passengers are advised to check with their

airline.

schools in Essex, 100 in Surrey, 195 across Tyneside, Wearside, County Durham

and Northumberland, and 280 schools and colleges in East Yorkshire, Hull and

northern Lincolnshire

direction and the Forth Road Bridge has been closed in both directions

A13 (Lakeside) - and J29 - A127 (Romford) - because of a jack-knifed lorry

of the Dartford tunnels

flyover

snow.

and the Hartsop junction, because of snow. One lane remains closed on the A66

between A6108 and A685 junctions. The A686 Hartside Pass Langwathby is also

closed

out of London Victoria and Charing Cross. No Southeastern trains are running

between Victoria and Dartford, Charing Cross and Hastings and between Strood

and Paddock Wood.

the station after all connecting road and rail services cancelled.

London to Kent were stuck for around five hours overnight, stranding about 60

passengers, who have now been taken off the trains. Train services are still

severely affected.

On Tuesday evening Max Cross, from Portsmouth, said he took seven hours - five

of them on the M25 - to complete a journey which usually takes 90 minutes to

Gatwick Airport.

Drivers were also stuck on the A2 near the M25 in Kent. Truck driver Nigel

Waller, who was on his way to Bradford, told the BBC at 0100 GMT that traffic

was slowly starting to move.

"I'm doing 15 miles an hour which is the fastest I have driven in hours. I have

been stuck since 1730," he said.

"I haven't seen any gritters and it's getting slippery because it's freezing

and there's slush. I saw a truck trying to overtake a broken down car - he went

straight through the central reservation."

Motoring organisation the AA said it had received an average of 1,350 calls an

hour on Tuesday. The RAC said call-outs to breakdowns peaked at 2,000 an hour.

Halfords said an additional 16,600 sledges were being shipped in to meet

increased demands.