Just a sample of the Echomail archive
Cooperative anarchy at its finest, still active today. Darkrealms is the Zone 1 Hub.
|    WX_TALK    |    Not sure about this one    |    1,256 messages    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
|    Message 1,160 of 1,256    |
|    Daryl Stout to All    |
|    Todays Weather History    |
|    04 Nov 25 00:01:17    |
      TZUTC: -0600       MSGID: 44.fidonet_wx_talk@1:19/33 2d6eccd9       PID: Synchronet 3.21a-Win32 master/aef7f70a7 Oct 26 2025 MSC 1944       TID: SBBSecho 3.30-Win32 master/aef7f70a7 Oct 26 2025 MSC 1944       BBSID: TBOLTBBS       CHRS: ASCII 1       FORMAT: flowed        TODAY Version 3.7 06/24/94 Copyright 1986, 1994 By Patrick Kincaid               Today is Tuesday November 4, 2025.        This is the 308th day of the year, there are 57 days left.               On this day...        Weather data after 1990 is PARTIAL. For more current        weather history, go to the National Climate Data Center        website at www.ncdc.noaa.gov        In 1927 A great Vermont flood occurred. Tropical rains deluged        the Green Mountain area of Vermont causing the worst        flood in the history of the state. Torrential rains, up        to 15 inches in the higher elevations, sent streams on a        rampage devastating the Winooski Valley. Flooding        claimed 200 lives and caused 40 million dollars damage.        The town of Vernon reported 84 deaths. Flooding left up        to eight to ten feet of water in downtown Montpelier VT.        (2nd-4th)        In 1979 100 mph chinook winds roared east of the Rockies in MT        and CO. In Boulder, winds blew from zephyrs to 90 mph in        seconds.        In 1985 A super wet Gulf storm dumped upwards of fifteen inches        of rain in the mountains of Virginia and West Virginia        causing devastating damage and claiming forty lives.        In 1987 Thirty-two cities in the eastern and south central U.S.        reported record high temperatures for the date. Highs of        74 degrees at Portland ME and 86 degrees at Fort Smith AR        equalled November records. It was the fourth day of        record warmth for Beckley WV, Memphi TN and Paducah KY.        A cold front ushered much colder air into the north        central U.S. Gale force winds lashed all five Great        Lakes.        In 1988 Thunderstorms developing ahead of a fast moving cold        front produced severe weather over the Tennessee Valley        and the Central Gulf Coast States during the afternoon        and evening hours, and into the next morning. Thunder-        storms spawned nineteen tornadoes, including eleven in        Mississippi. The last of the nineteen tornadoes killed        a woman in her mobile home in Lee FL. A tornado in        Culbert AL injured sixteen people, and caused two million        dollars damage. Thunderstorms also produced baseball        size hail in Alabama. Unseasonably hot air prevailed        south of the cold front. McAllen TX was the hot spot in        the nation with a high of 102 degrees.        In 1989 Snow and high winds plagued parts of Colorado and        Wyoming. Winds gusted to 71 mph near Wheatland WY,        and reached 80 mph west of Fort Collins CO. Up to five        inches of snow blanketed Yellowstone Park WY closing many        roads. Snow also blanketed northern Minnesota, with        seven inches reported at Baudette.        In 2001 Hurricane Michelle, the strongest of the 2001 Hurricane        Season, slammed into southern Cuba with 135 mph winds.        Originally a tropical depression off the coast of        Nicauragua and Honduras several days earlier, Michelle        rapidly intensified over the northwest Caribbean Sea.        After crossing Cuba, she skirted the Florida Keys, and        hit the Bahamas before heading into the Atlantic Ocean        toward Bermuda.       --- SBBSecho 3.30-Win32        * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (1:19/33)       SEEN-BY: 19/25 33 38 105/81 106/201 124/5016 128/187 153/7715 154/110       SEEN-BY: 218/700 226/30 227/114 229/110 206 317 426 428 470 664 700       SEEN-BY: 229/705 266/512 291/111 320/219 322/757 342/200 387/18 25       SEEN-BY: 396/45 460/58 902/26 2320/105 5020/400 5075/35       PATH: 19/33 396/45 229/426           |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
(c) 1994, bbs@darkrealms.ca