Thursday, July 19, 2012

AccuWeather

  • AccuWeather.com reports oppressive heat and humidity will spread into the Northeast on Monday. Temperatures will easily soar into the 90s, and a few spots will top off near 100 degrees through midweek.
  • (Abington Mariner)
  • This article was provided by AccuWeather.com. While Fabio should weaken as it heads northward in the eastern Pacific, Southern California will feel some impacts.
  • (LiveScience.com)
  • AccuWeather.com says the ongoing drought and Corn Belt disaster is likely to further drive down yields in the U.S. for 2012.
  • (Wisconsin Ag Connection)
  • This article was provided by AccuWeather.com. A very concentrated area of Saharan Dust has traveled all the way from Africa and is now heading toward Florida. The northern Caribbean islands have already been dealing with Saharan dust with very hazy skies.
  • (LiveScience.com)
  • AccuWeather.com agricultural meteorologists are concerned that new and frequent waves of near-100-degree temperatures and stingy rainfall will further stress crops over Iowa, Illinois and Nebraska into mid-August.
  • (AccuWeather.com)
  • AccuWeather.com reports the summer of 2012 is in the running for one of the top three hottest summers in the past 60 years in the United States and southern Canada. Steven A.
  • (Chattanoogan)
  • Were not officially there yet, AccuWeather senior meteorologist Brett Anderson says, but we are trending towards an El Niño. An El Niño climate pattern is a periodic warming of tropical Pacific Ocean water that affects weather around the world.
  • (USA Today)
  • Clouds and a thunderstorm will sweep the area today, according to accuweather.com. Rain showers are also expected throughout the day. A total of 2.09 inches of rainfall has been predicted.
  • (ydr.com)
  • We always like to pass on details about top apps to our readers whether they are for entertainment or practical purposes.
  • (Phones Review)
  • The ground is hard as a rock since it has been so dry recently, so runoff can produce flash flooding very quickly, AccuWeather.com Expert Senior Meteorologist Henry Margusity said.
  • (AccuWeather.com)

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