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Calgary Blizzard Soccer Club is a Canadian soccer team based in Calgary, Alberta that plays in the men's and women's divisions of League1 Alberta. History
Average trajectory of a clipper. An Alberta clipper, also known as an Alberta low, Alberta cyclone, Alberta lee cyclone, Canadian clipper, or simply clipper, is a fast-moving low-pressure system that originates in or near the Canadian province of Alberta just east of the Rocky Mountains and tracks east-southeastward across southern Canada and the northern United States to the North Atlantic Ocean.
The 2018–19 North American winter was unusually cold within the Northern United States, with frigid temperatures being recorded within the middle of the season.Several notable events occurred, such as a rare snow in the Southeast in December, a strong cold wave and several major winter storms in the Midwest, and upper Northeast and much of Canada in late January and early February, record ...
The storm produced 22 inches (55 cm) of snow in Chicago and was rated by the National Weather Service as the second worst blizzard to hit Chicago in the 20th century, after the Blizzard of 1967. Soon after the snow ended, record low temperatures occurred with values of −20 °F (−29 °C) or lower n parts of Illinois and surrounding states on ...
These storms were recorded in Calgary, Airdrie, Red Deer and Rocky Mountain House. [7] On June 30, 2016, a damaging storm hit the central Alberta town of Ponoka, causing $50 million in damages. [8] This storm produced large hail as well as a tornado. In May 2017, a damaging storm hit the central Alberta city of Lacombe, causing $68 million in ...
A major winter storm left behind heavy snow and bitter cold as it began to push off the Atlantic Coast on Thursday, leading to flight delays, snarled traffic and shuttered schools. The system had ...
An unusually early winter storm blanketed parts of the northern Rockies at the end of September 2019. Great Falls, Montana recorded 19.3 in (49 cm) of snow on September 28 and 29th, which is the largest September storm on record in the region and the second largest two day storm on record there, behind April 27-28, 2009.
The storm will drop a widespread area of 3 to 6 inches of snow from central Minnesota through central Michigan. Lower snow totals are anticipated south of this streak of heavier snow: Chicago ...