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In March 1973 snowfall was as high as 105 inches (2.7 m). Rainfall from July to September is also high, though not exceptional compared to many parts of southeastern Arizona. Hawley Lake holds the all-time record low temperature in Arizona history with −40 °F/°C recorded on January 7, 1971. It also holds the record for most precipitation in ...
Hawley Lake is almost always the coldest place in Arizona. SR 473 is marked as a spur of SR 73, but while the road itself continues to roughly intersect with that route in Fort Apache, it is not numbered beyond Hawley Lake and therefore does not connect to its parent at all. SR 473 was actually named as such because the adjacent stretch of SR ...
The lake is used as a retention basin for rain water and snow melt. There are also many other lakes and reservoirs in the area including Crescent Lake, Reservation Lake, Hurricane Lake Lee Valley Lake, Sunrise Lake,River Reservoir, and Hawley Lake. Near the West Fork Black River and Thompson trail #629 is the remnants of the Apache Railway.
This is a list of notable lakes and reservoirs located in the U.S. state of Arizona.Many of the lakes listed here contain game fish and are managed by the Arizona Game and Fish Department.
I-10 / SR 51 in Phoenix: I-10 in West Phoenix: 1990: current SR 202 Spur: 1.22: 1.96 Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport in Phoenix: Loop 202 in Phoenix 1993: current Unsigned SR 210: 3.96: 6.37 Broadway Boulevard in Tucson: Golf Links Road in Tucson 1998: current SR 238: 20.27: 32.62 Near Mobile: SR 347 in Maricopa: 1986
The house was designed by the American architect Frank Lloyd Wright and built for the architect's fourth child David, along with David's wife Gladys. [2] It is located at 5212 East Exeter Boulevard, [3] [4] with an alternate address of 4505 North Rubicon Avenue, [1] in the Arcadia neighborhood of Phoenix, Arizona, United States. [5]
Annual average humidity values vary from 55% in Flagstaff to 23% in Yuma. Due to the high temperatures, low humidity, and occurrence of sunshine, Arizona has high rates of evaporation. Average annual lake evaporation varies from about 80 inches (2,000 mm) in the southwestern part of the state to about 50 inches (1,300 mm) in the northeast. [4]
Skyline of Phoenix in 2009. Phoenix, the capital of the U.S. state of Arizona, has 58 completed high-rises taller than 200 feet (61 m). [1] The tallest building in Phoenix is the 40-story Chase Tower, completed in 1972 with 38 habitable floors rising to 483 feet (147 m). [2] It is also the tallest building in Arizona.