No telling how much more snow coming for Sierra Nevada
Summary by Ground News
More than 55 feet of snow has fallen on the mountains along the Nevada-California line this season. Over the weekend, it topped the previous No. 2 record of 55.9 feet set in 1982-83. More snow is forecast over the next 10 days, but nobody knows what the spring will bring. The official record book keeper is UC-Berkeley's Central Sierra Snow Lab.
0 Articles
0 Articles
All
Left
Center
Right
Associated Press News
No telling how much more snow coming for Sierra Nevada
A relentless winter at Lake Tahoe has now etched its way into the history books as the Sierra's second-snowiest on record. No one really knows how much snow fell on
No telling how much more snow coming for Sierra Nevada
By SCOTT SONNER
Associated Press RENO, Nev. (AP) — A relentless winter at Lake Tahoe has now etched its way into the history books as the Sierra’s second-snowiest on record. No one really knows how much snow fell on the infamous Donner Party when the pioneers were trapped atop the Sierra for months and dozens died in the winter of 1846-47. But 56.4 feet has now fallen this season at the Central Sierra Snow Lab at Soda Springs, California. That t…
No telling how much more snow coming for Sierra Nevada
By SCOTT SONNER Associated Press RENO, Nev. (AP) — No one really knows how much snow fell on the infamous Donner Party when the pioneers were trapped atop the Sierra Nevada for months and dozens died near Lake Tahoe in the winter of 1846-47. But this season has now etched its way into the history
Snow telling how much more coming in historic Sierra season
RENO, Nev. (AP) — No one really knows how much snow fell on the infamous Donner Party when the pioneers were trapped atop the Sierra Nevada for months and dozens died near Lake Tahoe in the winter of 1846-47. But this season has now etched its way into the history books as the second snowiest in the 77 years of record-keeping at the Central Sierra Snow Lab — more than 56.4 feet (677 inches, 17.2 meters) with no end in sight. And there’s still a…