Earth Changes
The cold front brought varying levels of precipitation to cities across Utah Valley. Payson received the most with 1.14 inches of rain by 10 a.m., according to the National Weather Service.
Other cities including Alpine, Provo and Spanish Fork received more than a half inch of precipitation.
Scattered showers are expected throughout Friday afternoon and evening.
Widespread precipitation is expected across the state as the cold front crosses northern and central Utah, according to the National Weather Service's website.
The National Weather Service issued a winter storm warning Friday for the Bighorn, Absaroka and Wind River mountains. Up to a foot of snow is possible in high elevations.
Snow was also expected in parts of Yellowstone National Park, including the Old Faithful area.
On Friday morning, snow forced the Wyoming Department of Transportation to close sections of U.S. 212 near the Montana border, including Beartooth Pass, northwest of Cody.
Source: Associated Press
All this has been happening on beaches from Seattle to Edmonds to Everett, not in search of a movie star, but a swallow-tailed gull, a bird nearly 4,000 miles from its home in the Galapagos Islands off the coast of South America.
News of local sightings quickly spread among the birding world, earning a "rare" designation on the American Birding Association blog.
"There have been people here from all over the country — California, the East Coast," said Winston Rockwell, of Everett. "People made flights out here just to see that bird."
It's only the third time the gull has been spotted in America. The others were in California's Monterey County in 1985 and Marin County in 1996.
Journalist and Oxford University graduate Paul McClean, 24, was discovered in the coastal village of Panama on Friday, with wounds on one of his legs.
Divers found Mr McClean's corpse in a muddy lagoon, 225 miles east of the capital Colombo.
A crocodile is believed to have dragged Mr McClean away on Thursday afternoon, the officer said, but a post-mortem examination is expected to formally establish the cause of death.
British media reports said Mr McClean, who worked for the Financial Times, was holidaying in Sri Lanka with friends.

The National Weather Service says the 56 mph microburst swept through the region in about a minute accompanied by rain showers.
Authorities say at least three people were injured with a 60-year-old woman suffering a severe arm injury that required amputation.
They say a 57-year-old woman suffered head and hip injuries while another person had a dislocated shoulder.
The National Weather Service says the 56 mph microburst swept through the region in about a minute accompanied by rain showers.

A rare sighting in the Labrador Straits, a dead Atlantic Bluefin tuna was found washed ashore in Red Bay last week.
A dead 738-pound Atlantic bluefin tuna was reported washed ashore in Red Bay Sept. 12. An initial report erroneously indicated the fish was a whale, misled by the size of the tuna rarely seen on the southern Labrador shores.
Carl Bradley, DFO field supervisor, sent some of his crew to sample the otolith and tissue from the tuna to gauge its age and its stock origin.
DFO then had the fish carried out into the ocean and sunk so it wouldn't attract predators.

Another North Atlantic Right whale has been found dead in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, off Miscou Island.
The Department of Fisheries and Oceans said in a release the carcass was found Friday morning off Miscou Island following a surveillance flight.
The department said it is the 11th confirmed death of a North Atlantic right whale in the Gulf to date.
DFO said it will attempt to recover and perform a necropsy on the whale next week.
"The Department cannot confirm if this whale is the same individual that was spotted entangled off the Gaspé Penninsula at the end of August," the statement read.
The whale appeared to have bite marks on its underbelly, town supervisor Christopher Hernandez said. "It looked like a shark might have gotten to this one," he said.
A 27-foot female sperm whale was discovered on the same beach in August. "It took everything we had to move it," Hernandez said. "I had my forklift, my backhoe. That was huge."
Wildfires have ravaged the West this summer with 64 large fires burning across 10 states as of Thursday, including 21 fires in Montana and 18 in Oregon. In all, 48,607 wildfires have burned nearly 13,000 square miles (33,586 square kilometers).
The fires have stretched firefighting resources, destroyed more than 500 homes and triggered health alerts as choking smoke drifted into major Western cities.
The Forest Service, part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, is the nation's primary firefighting agency.
Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said the severe fire season means officials "end up having to hoard all of the money that is intended for fire prevention, because we're afraid we're going to need it to actually fight fires."
The emphasis on firefighting means that money for prescribed burns, insect control and other prevention efforts is diverted to putting out fires in what Perdue called a self-defeating cycle. The end result is that small trees and vegetation remain in the forest for future fires to feed on.
"That's wrong, and that's no way to manage the Forest Service," Perdue said.
The Agriculture Department has been asking Congress for years to change the way firefighting is funded so the Forest Service does not have to raid non-fire programs in bad years.
The spending figure announced Thursday marks the first time wildfire spending by the Forest Service has topped $2 billion. The previous record was $1.7 billion in 2015.
In a new report published by the Global Warming Policy Foundation, Anastasios Tsonis, emeritus distinguished professor of atmospheric sciences at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, describes new and cutting-edge research into natural climatic cycles, including the well known El Nino cycle and the less familiar North Atlantic Oscillation and Pacific Decadal Oscillation.
He shows how interactions between these ocean cycles have been shown to drive changes in the global climate on timescales of several decades.
Professor Tsonis says:
"We can show that at the start of the 20th century, the North Atlantic Oscillation pushed the global climate into a warming phase, and in 1940 it pushed it back into cooling mode. The famous "pause" in global warming at the start of the 21st century seems to have been instigated by the North Atlantic Oscillation too."












Comment: Another source identified the species as a Risso's dolphin.