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2010–11 2011–12 The 2010–11 North American winter was influenced by an ongoing La Niña , seeing winter storms and very cold temperatures affect a large portion of the Continental United States , even as far south as the Texas Panhandle .
The April 2010 Rio de Janeiro floods and mudslides are an extreme weather event that has affected the State of Rio de Janeiro in Brazil in the first days of April 2010. At least 212 people have died, [ 253 ] [ 254 ] [ 255 ] 161 people have been injured (including several rescuers), [ 256 ] while at least 15,000 people have been made homeless ...
The average temperature in Oslo was −1.7 °C (28.9 °F) in November 2010, the coldest since 1968 which had −2.1 °C (28.2 °F). [34] The record low for Norway in November 2010 was measured in Karasjok Municipality in Finnmark, the northernmost county, on 27 November, showing −35 °C (−31 °F). [21]
This was an unusually far north tornado outbreak and one of only five high risk days during the month of November in recorded history (three since 2000). [283] Many Midwest cities (including Chicago, South Bend, and Fort Wayne) outside the climatologically most frequent High Risk locations experienced their second High Risk day of 2013.
November is the last month of the Atlantic hurricane season, but AccuWeather long-range forecasters are warning that more tropical trouble could be brewing, with one to three additional named ...
The winter of 2010–11 was a weather event that brought heavy snowfalls, record low temperatures, travel chaos and school disruption to the islands of Great Britain and Ireland. It included the United Kingdom's coldest December since Met Office records began, with a mean temperature of −1 °C (30 °F), breaking the previous record of 0.1 °C ...
Looking back on 2010, the year in real estate was, in a word, terrible. Property values continued to fall, foreclosures rose, and even the lowest interest rates in 50 years seemed to have little ...
Most, but not all, of the weather effects likely unwound last month, Goldman said. And just 47% of employers responded to the Labor Department’s October jobs survey.