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A massive dust storm buried parts of New Mexico and Texas in airborne smut Monday morning, shutting down highways and leaving nearly 900,000 residents trapped in a potentially deadly cloud.
Blowing dust reduced visibility to near zero in some parts of New Mexico, prompting road closures. Forecasters say dangerous fire conditions will persist until Thursday.
Two dust storms, also known as haboobs, enveloped regions in Texas and New Mexico Monday afternoon, creating unsafe road conditions.
Severe thunderstorms will head east by Saturday, impacting eastern Michigan and parts of northern Indiana. Rain from 1 to 2 ...
Dry winds fueled dust storms that limited visibility to near zero on some roadways and raised the risk of fires breaking out in the region.
SANTA FE, N.M. -- Dust storms raged across New Mexico on Tuesday, snarling highway traffic as the National Weather Service pushed an emergency alert to cellphones that warned of zero-visibility ...
Dust storms were reported across New Mexico, Texas and Colorado, closing roads and causing traffic accidents. A multi-vehicle pileup was reported on I-27 south of Canyon, Texas, Friday morning ...
NOAA weather satellites, which captured images of the New Mexico haboob, also used their cameras to detect dust and sand-sized particles in the air above West Texas and colored them yellow to ...
Bone-dry winds tore across parts of Texas and New Mexico, kicking up dust storms and causing dangerous driving conditions, as forecasters said the risk of fires breaking out in the parched region ...