Scotty’s Castle will require millions of dollars in repairs for flood damage, a Death Valley National Park spokeswoman said Saturday.
Las Vegas Weather
Though Hurricane Patricia touched down in Mexico on Friday night and brought heavy rain to Texas, Las Vegas won’t be seeing any of that moisture this weekend, according to the National Weather Service.
Hurricane Patricia, one of the most powerful storms on record, struck Mexico’s Pacific coast on Friday with destructive winds that tore down trees, moved cars and forced thousands of people to flee homes and beachfront resorts.
Parts of north Texas, including the Dallas-Fort Worth area, were on alert as the National Weather Service placed several counties on flash flood warning.
Nice weather will stick around the Las Vegas Valley through next week.
More pleasant weather is in store for the Las Vegas Valley moving into the weekend.
Temperatures in the Las Vegas Valley are leveling as a low-pressure weather system, which caused recent storms, passes over the area.
Twenty-three Death Valley National Park visitors and rangers were trapped overnight Monday in flash flooding that damaged several buildings at the Death Valley Scotty Historic District, the National Park Service said Tuesday.
It’s beginning to look a lot like fall, Las Vegas.
Drier weather Monday allowed for some roads affected by flooding to reopen.
A typhoon swept across the northern Philippines killing at least nine people as trees, power lines and walls were toppled and flood waters spread far from riverbeds, but tens of thousands of people were evacuated in time.
The Las Vegas Valley over the weekend got its fair share of rain and a touch of hail, bringing some beautiful skies along with it.
Gray skies are expected to stick around the Las Vegas Valley for the fifth day in a row Sunday.
Las Vegas is under a flash flood watch through Sunday as scattered showers continue.
Mudslides stranded nearly 200 vehicles and closed a California highway that is a popular route from the central state to Las Vegas.
A recent Wall Street Journal poll of leading economists put the probability of the United States going into recession over the next 12 months at 63 percent. Conventional wisdom is that the Federal Reserve Bank will continue raising interest rates to combat stubborn high inflation, thereby slowing the economy and causing gross domestic product to […]
A Rainbow Canyon gauge received .31 of an inch on Monday afternoon. No other measurable rain was recorded at Regional Flood Control District gauges.
A Saturday high of 73 is forecast by the National Weather Service, but with the race at 10 p.m., temperatures are expected to be in the low 60s. There is a slight chance of rain.
Sin City is reeling from a record summer, with extreme heat killing more of its residents than ever before.
Cold to chill the Las Vegas Valley through the weekend with mountain snow a possibility, says the National Weather Service.