Parts of south-east Australia will see increased rain and thunderstorm activity as a cold front continues to move over the nation.
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The end of August has seen isolated storms, high wind, hail event and snow flurries around parts of NSW, ACT, Victoria and Tasmania.
Snow fell up to 300 metres in Tasmania on Tuesday night, while the mainland measured between 500 and 700 metres at some snow resorts.
In other news:
The Bureau of Meteorology recorded snowfalls around Canberra, the central and eastern Victorian ranges, the Mount Lofty Ranges and Mount Remarkable in South Australia.
The Great Western Highway was closed due to black ice and snowfall around the NSW Central Tablelands, including Orange, Oberon, and the Blue Mountains.
Barrington Tops and Guyra saw light falls, while temperatures dipped below zero across Tasmania, inland Victoria, NSW and southern Queensland.
Perisher Valley in NSW registered the coldest temperature at -7.4 degress, with Falls Creek in Victoria sat at -6.7 degrees on Tuesday morning.
Rainfall of up to 38mm was experienced, with Tasmania's Lake Margaret recording the most.
The Bureau of Meteorology is predicting the front to deepen into a low pressure system off the NSW Central and Mid North Coasts, which may bring more showers.
A severe weather warning is in place for Lord Howe Island, with damaging winds expected from Wednesday evening.
Flood warnings are current for numerous rivers across NSW, Victoria, Tasmania, and southern Queensland including the Macquarie River, Bogan River, and Murrumbidgee River.