Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Weather Underground uses observations from over 250,000 personal weather stations worldwide. [21] The Weather Underground's WunderMap overlays weather data from personal weather stations and official National Weather Service stations on a Mapbox Map base and provides many interactive and dynamically updated weather and environmental layers. [22]
Turnagain Pass (el. 900 feet (274 m)) is a mountain pass just south of the municipal limits of Anchorage, Alaska. It is located in the northeastern part of Kenai Peninsula Borough. The pass marks the highest point on the Seward Highway at approximately milepost 70. [1] Traveling north, the Seward Highway descends to skirt the edge of Turnagain ...
The forecast calls for freezing fog to persist Wednesday through about 10 a.m. Thursday, when a 30% chance of rain and snow is forecast. After 10 p.m. the chance of snow increases to 50%.
Mount Alpenglow is a 4,816-foot (1,468 m) landmark mountain located in the Kenai Mountains, in the U.S. state of Alaska.The peak is situated in Chugach National Forest, 8 mi (13 km) southwest of Girdwood, Alaska, on the south shore of Turnagain Arm, opposite Bird Point from where it can be prominently seen from the Seward Highway and the Alaska Railroad.
Nov. 9—The Seward Highway was closed early Thursday from near Summit Lake through Moose Pass to Crown Point, and heavy snow was making it impassable in places from Seward to the Hope Cutoff, the ...
Turnagain Arm (Dena'ina: Tutl'uh) is a waterway into the northwestern part of the Gulf of Alaska. It is one of two narrow branches at the north end of Cook Inlet , the other being Knik Arm . Turnagain is subject to climate extremes and large tide ranges.
Turnagain may refer to: Turnagain Arm, a waterway into the northwestern part of the Gulf of Alaska; Cape Turnagain, a prominent headland on the east coast of New Zealand's North Island; Turnagain Island (Queensland), an island; Turnagain Pass, a mountain pass just south of the municipal limits of Anchorage, Alaska
Turnagain Arm. The inlet was first explored and settled by Alutiiq people, tribes of coastal-dwelling Pacific Eskimos, beginning around 6000 years ago.The Chugach arrived around the first century and were the last of the Alutiiq people to settle in the area, but abandoned it after tribes of Dena'ina people, an Athabaskan people from the interior of the state, arrived sometime between 500 and ...