For anyone who is researching through reading from the following links, I thought I'd include a couple of notes for what I think are misprints/errors on these pages: (Don't get me wrong, they're still good reading.

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h0mersimps0n said:
Anerythristic Type "B" • This morph lacks erythrophores, the red pigment in the skin.
This type tends to posess a large amount of yellow pigmentation in the neck. It is NOT compatible with Type "A" Anerythrism. AKA : Charcoal
(This was probably a copy/paste error from anery A. They generally (but not always) have less yellow than Anerys. Personally I prefer to call them Charcoals to avoid all confusion with type A, but that's my own preference.
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Blizzard • This morph is the product of combining the Amelanistic and Anerythristic Type "B" genes.
This morph is SOLID WHITE with NO pattern.
(Some are at hatching, but a lot of them show visible pattern and some have yellow outlines around the saddles.)
http://www.reptimania.co.uk/cornmorphs.htm
Charcoal or Anerythristic Type B ( Pine Island )
This Anerythristic gene gives the snake a bluish tinge around the head and eye area, they are paler than the Type A
and have no yellow pigment around the throat and neck area. Breeding a Type A to a Type B will give you Anerythristic and Normal looking babies in a clutch,
concluding that the Type B Anerythristic is also carrying the Type A gene. These snakes come from Pine Island off the coast of Lee County Florida. First discovered in 1984 through selective breeding by Bill & Kathy Love.
(Again, many have yellow pigment. All of our charcoals have yellow. Also, the second segment was true of the first charcoal specimen, it was het for anery. However, any given charcoal can be not het for anery, in which case it would produce all normal offspring when crossed to an anery.)
Blizzard
A combination of the Anerythristic Type B gene & the Amelanistic gene produces a snake that
as an adult is completely white and patternless...
(See the above about blizzards...)
Hurricane
A combination of the striped gene & the motley gene where the blotches are joined by striping giving a pattern that consists of a series of circles that run down the back of the snake, not all combinations of the stripe/motley gene give this pattern, some look intermediate between the two, others have well defined square blotches this morph has been coined the "Cubed" corn.
(This seems to be a description of motley/stripe corns, not hurricane motleys.)
http://www.pitt.edu/~mcs2/herp/genetics.html
(This is a good primer. The information is presented pretty well and it's useful.
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The other link I'd add to this list is my own morph library.
http://serpwidgets.com/Morphs/morphs.html