A list of puns related to "Great Basin"
Does anyone know why Great Basin Adventures Amusement Park in Reno is haunted?
all are welcome. If you live in or around the northern Nevada area we want to see you log on and say hello. come join us for a chat and get to know your neighbors. https://discord.gg/6ZNy2CvP
As a Canadian, I am following the news out of southern BC closely in terms of the catastrophic flooding caused by climate change. I live in the great lakes area in the snow belt region. I was wondering: since our winters seem to be having a later and later start but lasting longer into the spring (ie. late April blizzards), and the lakes are at record warm levels for this time of year, meaning that with no ice coverage, when cool weather arrives we will have more intense precipitation in the winter in the form of lake effect snow. It is not super uncommon for periodic snowfalls where overnight you get ~5 feet and it just keeps coming down. I have seen climate change projections for the great lakes basin area and they explain how modelling shows a decrease in precipitation during the summer months and an increase in the winter months as I outlined above due to warmer temps, but not cold enough to freeze lakes. Combine that with increases in extreme weather events, is it possible that we could witness a catastrophic phenomenon of a "mega snow" event to coin a term? In other words, under these conditions in the near to medium future, could we possibly see like a 10 ft plus snow fall event overnight in an extreme locked in snowsquall? Could this be life threatening? Obviously on the roads it would be, but I mean to the point of requiring evac in your home like a flood situation? Also would the increase in temps make a rare cyclonic storm event developing over Lake Huron much more likely like the " The 1996 Lake Huron Cyclone, commonly referred to as Hurricane Huron and Hurroncane" I'd imagine the answer is yes. Another part of my long winded question is even though the great lakes basin sit well above sea level, is it possible that with the increase in precipitation that we could also see inland flooding caused by this? Obviously no one has a crystal ball and my formal education on this is limited to a couple of environmental science courses and natural hazards mitigation and climate courses I took in university as electives, so I am hoping for a more detailed and technical answer from someone who really knows their stuff. Thanks!
I had some questions about Great Basin University that I'm hoping you guys may be able to help me with.
Thank you for all your help in advance
Anyone remember that place? Daw some old videos of it and I love going to San Rafael
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