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As extreme weather events affect the profitability of agriculture, here are four areas to bring focus to the ripple effect.
Restrictions are in place at the Panama Canal to conserve water - creating a backlog of ships waiting to pass.
Weather patterns have been anything but predictable this year thanks to El Niño. However, one meteorologist says America’s heartland may start to see wetter weather conditions just in time for fall.
Bret Walts of BAM Weather predicts the transition to a colder pattern will be later in September and into October.
On May 12, Nate Hansen of Dell Rapids, S.D., saw a wall of dust appear on the horizon.
Be ready for a colder and snowier winter versus recent years.
Arkansas farmer Clay Smith had a close encounter with lightning this week — and it was all caught on camera. He describes the experience as well as the damage it caused.
On Thursday, forecasters issued an El Niño Advisory, meaning El Niño conditions are now present and expected to gradually strengthen into the winter.
High water levels and flooding are starting to ease on the upper Mississippi River which is allowing locks to reopen and barge traffic to resume.
State police said the pileups were caused by “excessive winds blowing dirt from farm fields across the highway, resulting in zero visibility.”