Sunday, September 12, 2010

[californiadisasters] another major fire in Colorado




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To: californiadisasters@yahoogroups.com
From: kimnoyes@gmail.com
Date: Sun, 12 Sep 2010 12:43:25 -0700
Subject: [californiadisasters] On This Date In CA Weather History (September 12)

 
On This Date In California Weather History.....

1979: Low temperature of 75 degrees at Bakersfield.
This was one of 5 times this month the low temperature in Bakersfield never fell below 75 degrees, a record for the month of September.

1976: Record rains that started on 9.9 ended on this day came from Tropical Storm Kathleen (called a 160+ year event by meteorologists).
14.76 inches fell on south slopes of Mt. San Gorgonio, 10.13 inches at Mt. Laguna, eight inches at Mt. San Jacinto, four+ inches in the Little San Bernardino Mountains, and 1.8 to 2.8 inches in the Coachella Valley.
Deep Canyon (above La Quinta) recorded 2.96 inches in three hours on 9.10. Rainfall in the Santa Rosa Mountains above the Coachella Valley was called the "heaviest in recorded history."
Six were buried and killed in sand in Ocotillo.
Floods of record were attained at numerous streams around the Coachella Valley.
1.84 inches of rain fell in Riverside on this day, 2.09 inches fell in Borrego Springs, 2.33 inches fell in Victorville, 2.57 inches fell in Idyllwild, and five inches fell in Palomar Mountain, each the greatest daily amounts on record for September.
The Victorville amount is also the third highest daily amount on record.
This occurred during the El Niño of 1976-77.
Hurricane Kathleen also brought the southwest the highest sustained winds ever associated with an eastern Pacific tropical cyclone with sustained winds of 57 mph at Yuma on 9.10.

1971: It was 103° in LA. It was 100° in Palomar Mountain, the highest temperature on record.
This occurred on eight other occasions.

1939: Four inches of rain fell across the deserts and mountains as a dying tropical cyclone moved across Baja California into southwestern Arizona on 9.11 and on this day.
This was the second tropical cyclone to impact California during the busy month of September 1939.
A strong El Niño contributed to the activity.

1935: The high temperature at Carson City, NV was 100.

Source: NWS Hanford, Reno, & San Diego

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