Phoenix engulfed by 3rd giant dust storm in less than two months

August 19, 2011PHOENIX — A giant wall of dust rolled through the Phoenix area on Thursday for the third time since early July — turning the sky brown, creating dangerous driving conditions and delaying some airline flights. The dust storm, also known as a haboob in Arabic and around Arizona, swept through Pinal County and headed northeast, reaching Phoenix at about 6 p.m. Some incoming and departing flights at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport were temporarily delayed because of the storm, according to airport officials who couldn’t immediately provide exact numbers. Take-offs and landing began again at about 6:50 p.m. National Weather Service meteorologists said a powerful thunderstorm packing winds of up to 60 mph hit Pinal County and pushed the dust storm toward Arizona’s most populous county. There were several reports of downed poles and Salt River Project officials said 3,500 of its customers were without electricity, mostly in the Queen Creek area southeast of Phoenix. There were no immediate reports of any weather-related auto accidents. It was the third major dust storm to hit the Phoenix metro area since last month. A haboob on July 5 brought a mile-high wall of dust that halted airline flights, knocked out power for 10,000 people and covered everything in its path with a thick sheet of dust. Another dust storm hit July 18 reaching heights of 3,000 to 4,000 feet, delaying flights and cutting off power for more than 2,000 people in the Phoenix metro area. Weather officials say haboobs only happen in Arizona, the Sahara desert and parts of the Middle East because of dry conditions and large amounts of sand. –The Chron
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2 Responses to Phoenix engulfed by 3rd giant dust storm in less than two months

  1. breathmints says:

    that would be scary to witness..i would think its an apocalypse if i had seen that in my town. scary yo

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  2. BDM says:

    Acually it was not that scary, I was in Scottsdale getting dinner when I noticed the yellow looking mass starting to roll over the mountains. With in about 5 minutes you could not see them anymore. I think I only witnessed the edge as it did not get as dark as I had seen in other YouTube videos. The winds were surprisingly strong going from 0 before the storm to 50 during. Like a thunderstorm with out precipitation.

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