Hundreds of motorists are trapped on the North York Moors as snow and ice left major roads impassable.
Several crashes on the A171 near Whitby caused long tailbacks with motorists stranded into the evening as temperatures plunged to -2C.
Hundreds of motorists have been left stranded as a sudden blizzard buried North Yorkshire and sent temperatures plunging to –2C.
Drivers were brought to a halt on the A171 near Whitby after heavy snow rendered the route impassable, sparking chaos for commuters.
Footage shared online shows long tailbacks of vehicles crawling through a white-out, sparking chaos for commuters and forcing police to warn drivers to stay away.
On the A169 near Fylingdales, a lorry blocked the road, forcing traffic to be rerouted through Scarborough.
The chaos hits just hours before an amber warning comes into force across parts of the North York Moors and Yorkshire Wolds, where forecasters say up to 25cm (10in) of snow could fall between 3am and 9pm tomorrow.
Wintry showers are also hammering coastal regions across the UK, after 7cm (2.7in) settled overnight and triggered yellow alerts across East Anglia, the South West, Wales, North East England, northern Scotland and Northern Ireland.
The Met Office has also confirmed that its yellow warning for snow and ice has been extended further north, reaching up to the Humber and now covering parts of Lincolnshire.
One image shared around 5pm today shows vehicles and a lorry trying to drive under the dangrous condition.
Motorist seen driving through the dangerous snowy conditions

Queues of traffic seen on the North Yorkshire road as police urge drivers to avoid the area

Lorry stick on A169 near Fylingdales, prompting police to divert traffic through Scarborough
One post on the Facebook page North Yorkshire Weather Updates said: ‘17.00 thankfully a lot of vehicles have managed to leave to A171 Birk Brow area between Guisborough to Whitby.
‘But conditions are still treacherous and vehicles are still stuck hour half later.’
North Yorkshire Police said: ‘Please avoid the A171 near Whitby and across the moors towards Guisborough – lots of vehicles are getting stuck due to the weather conditions.
‘The A174 out of Whitby maybe passable at this time. If in any doubt, please don’t travel if you don’t need to. Stay safe out there.’
London Mayor Sir Sadiq Khan has brought in the capital’s Severe Weather Emergency Protocol (SWEP), which provides extra accommodation for homeless people.
The plan sees boroughs and homelessness charities open additional emergency housing for people sleeping rough in conditions that could pose a threat to life.
SWEP, which is activated when temperatures fall to 0C (32F), was in place for 22 nights last winter when London boroughs housed more than 2,000 people.
In Scotland, dozens of schools and nurseries have shut due to the weather – including 20 in the Highland Council area, 19 in Aberdeenshire and three in Moray.

Queues of traffic in the snowy conditions on the A174 Boulby Bank near the North York Moors National Park

The treacherous conditions for drivers has prompted police to warn motorists



A person walking their dog through the snow in Tow Law, County Durham, this morning

A snowplough on the A9 near Blair Atholl in Scotland today as weather warnings are in force

A train is driven through the snow near Northolt in west London this morning

A person runs as snow begins to fall near Windsor Castle in Berkshire this morning
The Met Office expects further wintry showers on the coasts of northern Scotland ton Wednesday night as well as the east and west coasts of the UK, after more snow fell this morning.
Areas including London, Hertfordshire, Berkshire, Surrey, Essex, Shropshire and Northumberland saw snow, with Met Office weather stations in Lake Vyrnwy in Powys, Wales, recording 7cm of lying snow at 8am.
Other weather stations reporting lying snow include Lerwick in Shetland which saw 5cm, 4cm in Loch Glascarnoch and 7cm in Altnaharra, both in the Scottish Highlands, 2cm in Aviemore, Inverness-shire, and 1cm each in Dyce, Aberdeenshire, Drumalbin in Lanarkshire and at Redesdale Camp in Northumberland.
London Mayor Sir Sadiq Khan has brought in the capital’s Severe Weather Emergency Protocol (SWEP), which provides extra accommodation for homeless people.
The plan sees boroughs and homelessness charities open additional emergency housing for people sleeping rough in conditions that could pose a threat to life.
SWEP, which is activated when temperatures fall to 0C (32F), was in place for 22 nights last winter when London boroughs housed more than 2,000 people.
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