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Where snowfall from both storms overlaps in the mountains from southern and central Colorado to northern New Mexico, 1-3 feet of snow is likely to fall in total this week, with locally higher ...
A major storm dumped heavy snow in Colorado on Thursday – forcing flight cancellations and shutting down a highway that connects Denver to Colorado ski resorts. The storm, which began Wednesday ...
A massive winter storm poised to unleash a barrage of heavy snow, treacherous ice, rain, and severe thunderstorms across a 1,300-mile swath of the United States will affect an estimated 62 million ...
The Holiday Blizzards were followed by an additional storm bearing more than a foot of snow on January 4–5, bringing the snowfall total for 16 days to more than 80 inches (2.0 m) in some areas. Denver itself received over 30 inches (0.76 m) of snow and over 55 inches (1.4 m) total for the season. [4]
Late on March 12 through early March 13, the already-unusually strong Colorado low underwent explosive intensification, with the storm's minimum central pressure falling from 994 mbar (29.4 inHg) to 968 mbar (28.6 inHg) in roughly 16 hours, more than meeting the criteria for a weather bomb or "bomb cyclone" (a storm that undergoes a pressure ...
The AccuWeather Local StormMax™ wind gust for this storm is 120 mph. At speeds of 60-110 mph, not only are power outages likely due to falling trees and downed power lines, but significant ...
In July 1988, Continental Airlines filed a report with the NTSB positing the causes of the crash as wake turbulence, poor snow plowing on the runway and errors by air traffic controllers. [15] However, the NTSB investigated the wake-turbulence theory and concluded that wake turbulence from the preceding flight would not have affected Flight 1713.
Ice accumulations look small, just a glaze to a few hundredths of an inch, with an inch or two of snow at higher elevations. The ice could be enough, however, to make for slick roads for Monday ...