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 1,230 of 1,256    |
|    Daryl Stout to All    |
|    Todays Weather History    |
|    23 Jan 26 00:01:10    |
      TZUTC: -0600       MSGID: 115.fidonet_wx_talk@1:19/33 2dd84519       PID: Synchronet 3.21a-Win32 master/04856e14d Nov 10 2025 MSC 1944       TID: SBBSecho 3.32-Win32 master/04856e14d Nov 10 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 Friday January 23, 2026.        This is the 23rd day of the year, there are 342 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 1780 The coldest day of the coldest month of record in the        northeastern U.S. A British Army thermometer in New York        City registered a reading of 16 degrees below zero.        During that infamous hard winter the harbor was frozen        solid for five weeks, and the port was cut off from sea        supply.        In 1943 (23rd-24th) A 24-hour precipitation record was set for        California when Hoegees Camp (in the San Gabriel Mountains)        measured 26.12".        In 1971 The temperature at Prospect Creek AK plunged to 80 degrees        below zero, the coldest reading of record for the United        States.        In 1987 Strong winds ushered bitterly cold air into the north        central U.S., and produced snow squalls in the Great Lakes        Region. Snowfall totals in northwest Lower Michigan ranged        up to 17 inches in Leelanau County. Wind chill temperatures        reached 70 degrees below zero at Sault Ste Marie MI and        Hibbing MN.        In 1988 Northeastern Colorado experienced its most severe windstorm        in years. A wind gust to 92 mph was recorded at Boulder CO        before the anenometer blew away, and in the mountains, a        wind gust to 120 mph was reported at Mines Peak. The high        winds blew down a partially constructed viaduct east of        Boulder, as nine unanchored concrete girders, each weighing        forty-five tons, were blown off their supports.        In 1989 Low pressure brought heavy snow to Wyoming, with 18 inches        reported at the Shoshone National Forest, and 17 inches in        the Yellowstone Park area. Gunnison CO, with a low of 19        degrees below zero, was the cold spot in the nation for        the twelfth day in a row.        In 1990 A Pacific cold front brought strong and gusty winds to the        northwestern U.S. Winds in southeastern Idaho gusted to 62        mph at Burley. Strong winds also prevailed along the        eastern slopes of the northern and central Rockies. Winds        in Wyoming gusted to 74 mph in Goshen County.       --- SBBSecho 3.32-Win32        * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (1:19/33)       SEEN-BY: 19/25 33 38 42 43 105/81 106/201 124/5016 128/187 153/7715       SEEN-BY: 154/110 218/700 226/30 227/114 229/110 134 206 317 426 428       SEEN-BY: 229/470 664 700 705 266/512 291/111 320/219 322/757 342/200       SEEN-BY: 387/18 25 396/45 460/58 902/26 2320/105 5020/400 5075/35       PATH: 19/33 396/45 229/426           |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
(c) 1994, bbs@darkrealms.ca