Weather Alert in Idaho

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Avalanche Watch issued February 23 at 1:51PM MST by NWS Boise ID

AREAS AFFECTED: Adams, ID; Idaho, ID; Valley, ID

DESCRIPTION: The following message is transmitted at the request of the Payette National Forest Avalanche Center. ...The Payette National Forest Avalanche Center in McCall Idaho has issued a BACKCOUNTRY AVALANCHE WATCH... * WHAT...An Avalanche Watch is in effect. Expect very dangerous avalanche conditions to develop over the next 24-48 hours. Heavy snowfall, wind, and rainfall will overload the current snowpack setup. * WHERE...The Salmon River Mountains, the West Mountains, and the surrounding mountain areas. * WHEN...In effect from Mon 12:00 MST to Tue 12:00 MST. * IMPACTS...Natural and human-triggered avalanches large enough to bury people are very likely to occur within 24-48 hours of this issuance. Avalanches may connect across terrain features like ridges or release multiple start zones at once. Additionally, rainfall to 7,000 feet will weaken surface snow and increase the likelihood of larger loose avalanches, as well as avalanches that break deeper within the snowpack. Smaller slopes, such as roadcuts, may also avalanche, depositing a surprising amount of debris on the road below.

INSTRUCTION: Anticipate conditions that dictate staying off and out from below steep slopes - slopes steeper than about 30 degrees. Travel in avalanche terrain is not recommended per this upcoming timeframe. Natural and human-triggered avalanches may occur in unexpected or surprising ways, travel farther than anticipated, and impact gentler terrain below. Even small but steep terrain features, such as road cuts or rooftops holding old snow, may be hazardous. Consult WWW.PAYETTEAVALANCHE.ORG or WWW.AVALANCHE.ORG for more detailed information. Similar avalanche danger may exist at locations outside the coverage area of this or any avalanche center. LAT...LON 4539 11600 4520 11584 4513 11579 4455 11577 4455 11603 4439 11600 4427 11613 4440 11627 4479 11635 4497 11622 4527 11633 4535 11635 4539 11629

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Weather Topic: What is Evaporation?

Home - Education - Precipitation - Evaporation

Evaporation Next Topic: Fog

Evaporation is the process which returns water from the earth back to the atmosphere, and is another crucial process in the water cycle.

Evaporation is the transformation of liquid into gas, and it happens because molecules are excited by the application of energy and turn into vapor. In order for water to evaporate it has to be on the surface of a body of water.

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Weather Topic: What are Fractus Clouds?

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Fractus Clouds Next Topic: Freezing Rain

A fractus cloud (scud) is a fragmented, tattered cloud which has likely been sheared off of another cloud. They are accessory clouds, meaning they develop from parent clouds, and are named in a way which describes the original cloud which contained them.

Fractus clouds which have originated from cumulus clouds are referred to as cumulus fractus, while fractus clouds which have originated from stratus clouds are referred to as stratus fractus. Under certain conditions a fractus cloud might merge with another cloud, or develop into a cumulus cloud, but usually a fractus cloud seen by itself will dissipate rapidly.

They are often observed on the leading and trailing edges of storm clouds, and are a display of wind activity.

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