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Winter Storms Hit US

Fog and mist surrounds buildings in mid-town Manhattan, 15 January 2007, in New York. Four days of winter ice, snow and powerful winds in the US Midwest have claimed at least 29 lives, officials in the hard-hit states of Oklahoma and Missouri said Monday.In Oklahoma, authorities said 11 people had died on state roads since the storm began last week, prompting President George W. Bush to declare an emergency in the central state.Officials in Missouri reported that six people had died, five in traffic accidents and one from carbon monoxide poisoning, a common cause of death when those without power use fuel-burning stoves after their heating goes out. Photo courtesy AFP

Eastern Canada finally gets snowfall after mild winter start
Montreal (AFP) Jan 15 - After an unusually mild start to the winter season, eastern Canada was hit by the first snow storm of the season Monday, forcing several flight cancellations and causing road accidents. An ice storm in Ontario province and snow in neighboring Quebec snarled traffic and several weather-related road accidents took place in and around Toronto and Montreal, none of them fatal.

The weather forced 50 flight cancellations and 80 delays at Toronto and Montreal airports. About 15 centimeters (six inches) of snow fell in Montreal. The wintery weather arrived after an unusually warm and snowless start of the season. Weather services reported record temperatures of around 10 degrees Celsius (40 Fahrenheit) in several parts of the country this month, when normally the thermometer shows below-freezing temperatures.

by Staff Writers
Chicago (AFP) Jan 15, 2007
A massive winter storm moved eastward across the central US Monday bringing snow, sleet, ice and flash floods, killing at least 29 people and prompting President George W. Bush to declare an emergency in Oklahoma state. Since Friday, weather-related road accidents killed 14 people in Oklahoma, including seven in a minivan crash Sunday, while 103,000 people were without power, state authorities said Monday.

Bush declared an emergency in the central state. The Federal Emergency Management Agency began distributing generators and bottled water to communities hit by the ice storm, said the Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management.

The state of Missouri said the weather claimed eight lives, with traffic accidents caused by slick conditions killing seven and one dying from carbon monoxide poisoning, a common cause of death when those without power use fuel-burning stoves to heat their homes.

More than 300,000 people lost power in Missouri due to downed power lines, the state reported Sunday. One line worker was injured when he fell from a utility pole.

In Kansas, five people were reported killed in weather-related traffic accidents and one person was poisoned by carbon monoxide exposure, said state officials quoted by the Kansas City Star newspaper.

One person died in a weather-related traffic accident in New York state, according to WGY radio.

In Texas to the south, the governor called out the National Guard after more than six inches of rain caused flash flooding and dramatic high-water rescues.

The National Weather Service issued flood warnings and advisories in several states, from Louisiana to Ohio and Illinois. An ice storm warning was posted for parts of the northeastern states of New Hampshire and Maine.

Record-breaking cold weather even hit the Pacific Coast state of California, where mild temperatures usually prevail all year.

In central Los Angeles, the thermometer dropped to 2.0 degrees Celsius (36 Fahrenheit) Monday morning, a record-setting temperature not felt in the city for 75 years.

Farmers in the Central Valley and the southern part of the state worried about freezing temperatures ruining the lucrative citrus crop, the Los Angeles Times and other media reported.

Photographs showed icicles hanging off of tangerine trees in a Central Valley orchard near Fresno, a rare sight in the state.

California oranges, lemons and other produce worth as much as half a billion dollars were likely ruined, the Los Angeles Times reported Monday, citing an industry spokesman.

The storm in central states was moving eastward, and has already caused ice storms in western parts of New York state, forecasters said. It was expected to cause less trouble as it crosses the northeast New England region, according to the National Weather Service.

"Things are improving but it's cold," National Weather Service meteorologist Bruce Sullivan told AFP.

The Midwest will get a break from the weather, Sullivan said, followed by a dusting of snow.

"That will usher in a lot colder air, and a 'lake effect' from the Great Lakes," in which cold air passing over the lakes picks up moisture and dumps snow on surrounding areas, he said.

Parts of Colorado got up to half a meter (18 inches) of snow while up to eight centimeters (three inches) of sleet were reported in Illinois, Kansas and Missouri, Romano said. Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Oklahoma and Missouri got 2.5 centimeters (an inch) or more of freezing rain.

North of the border, eastern Canada was finally hit by the first snow storm of the winter after an unusually mild start to the season. The weather forced 50 flight cancellations and 80 delays at Montreal and Toronto airports.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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Lakes Have Not Developed Ice Covers This Winter
Buffalo NY (SPX) Jan 16, 2007
The freeze dates for many small- and intermediate-sized lakes in the Northeast and parts of the Midwest will come later than usual this year, in part as a reflection of continuing global warming, but also because of a stronger-than-expected El Nino phenomenon, says a University at Buffalo limnologist, a scientist who studies inland bodies of water. Kenton Stewart, Ph.D., UB professor emeritus of biological sciences, maintains what may be the largest scientific inventory of lake-ice dates in North America from hundreds of lakes in several states.







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