Earth Changes
Dust storms rolled through parts of New Mexico and Texas Tuesday night, reducing visibilities to near zero.
The storm was caused by a strong cold front moving through the north, according to AccuWeather Western U.S. Weather Expert Ken Clark.
"There were strong west winds ahead of the front that brought winds of 20 to 40 mph," Clark said. "A strong north wind developed with wind gusts up to 50+ mph that created the dust storm."

According to the Moore fire department, at about 1:15 p.m., crews responded to a grass fire at N.E. 27th and Bryant in Moore.
Oklahoma firefighters are battling several grass fires Tuesday afternoon across the state.
Guthrie Wildfire
Fire officials are working a wildfire in southwest Guthrie. The fire is located at S. Eastern Rd. and W. Seward Rd. near Liberty Lake. Brush pumpers are on the scene, and the fire is expected to be extinguished quickly.
Moore Grass Fire
According to the Moore fire department, at about 1:15 p.m., crews responded to a grass fire at N.E. 27th and Bryant in Moore.
Authorities have shut down Bryant in the area.
Oklahoma City firefighters are helping Moore firefighters battle this fire. Crews worked to stop the fire from crossing Bryant. They have that fire under control.
"There may be a little smoke, but we consider it out," said Scott L. Peterich of the Florida Forest Service.
The fire started Sunday and stayed west of Pines Boulevard and north of Interstate 75, Peterich said. He said the fire was brought under control by 4:45 p.m. Monday.
Fire officials stayed in touch with Florida Highway Patrol officers in the event that smoke advisories would be needed before the afternoon commute. That did not prove to be the case, Peterich said.
The first quake, a 6.8 off the Eureka coast on Sunday night caused little to no damage, but shook homes and rattled nerves around Northern California. Dozens of aftershocks, some approaching a magnitude 5 continue to move the San Andreas fault.
Another quake, initially a 6.8 magnitude as well, but later downgraded to a 6.4 hit Monday near the Sandwich Islands in the southern Atlantic.
A 5.9 magnitude earthquake hit Monday north of Papua, New Guinea along the Pacific "Ring of Fire."

Locals organised to have this whale, which was beach at Dooriel in Ballycroy in February, buried last week.
A giant sperm whale beached in Ballycroy during January's storms has been buried because of the concerns of locals, it has emerged. The Mayo News reported last month that the county council, in consultation with the NPWS (National Parks and Wildlife), would not bury the mammoth mammal, which was almost 50-foot (14.6 metres) long, with a four-metre wide tail fluke.
Speaking on behalf of the council in mid-February, Mr Martin Keating said the local authority had no plans to bury this whale, as there was a significant logistical exercise involved in this instance.
"It is stranded on a very rocky beach which is over a kilometre from a public road and is also away from local houses," Mr Keating said.
The dead whale, which had a deep gash on its back possibly caused by a passing ship, was dead when it was washed ashore and discovered by a local boatman at Dooriel Beach on Sunday, February 9.
However, Erris Sinn Féin Cllr Rose Conway-Walsh told The Mayo News yesterday: "With the high tide last Sunday week, we were presented with an opportunity as the whale had moved from the stony part of the beach onto sandy ground, and we got a local contractor to dig a hole as it was easier to bury it."
Officials say no children were hurt when a loaded school bus slid partially into a sinkhole on a city street in northeast Ohio, nearly flipping it.
A school official in Conneaut said the pavement collapsed as the bus passed on Monday afternoon, causing the rear wheels to fall into the hole. The angle of the bus in the hole caused problems for rescue workers trying to get the 30 elementary-aged children off the bus.
School superintendent Kent Houston tells The Star-Beacon that the kids were more scared than anything. They were transferred to another bus for the ride home. A wrecker was called to extract the bus.
The sinkhole may have been caused by one of the water leaks that have resulted from the extreme weather this winter.
Source: AP

Officials from the city of Bloomington discuss options after another sinkhole was reported Tuesday on Locust Street — the second in the city in two days. A wrecker was able to free the truck, but Locust Street will remain closed for several days while repair work continues.
For the second time in as many days, the Bloomington Public Works Department was called Tuesday to the scene of a vehicle stuck in a sinkhole. As a result, Locust Street will be closed to through traffic for water and sewer repair for several days, he said.
"Because of the safety issues with that street, we had to close it as well," he said.
That comes a day after a sinkhole on Monday forced the closure of the 900 block of North Lee Street. A car wheel sunk through the pavement, unveiling an underground hole several feet deep that remained under repair Tuesday.
The latest problem surfaced when a Union Pacific heavy machinery truck was eastbound on Locust about 11:15 a.m. The driver's side rear dual wheels got stuck in a sinkhole near the intersection of Locust and Western Avenue.
"This duck die-off has been unprecedented. Biologists who've been here for 35 years have never seen anything like this," says Wildlife Biologist Connie Adams of the New York Department of Environmental Conservation.
The Western New York region is bearing witness to a quiet but devastating ecological disaster. The harsh and seemingly endless winter has been the root cause of death for thousands of ducks, from Rochester to the Niagara River.
Adams says, "This has never been documented in the past. ... As cold as people believe the winter has been, it has in fact been that cold because it's verified by the fact that this abundant wildlife population cannot survive... this winter."
The massive die-off first was noticed by local birders in mid-January. Adams tells 2 The Outdoors that when the NYDEC went out to investigate the situation had already reached a serious stage.











