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Arizona Dust Storm, Haboob, Moves Through Phoenix Area (VIDEO)

AP/The Huffington Post    
First Posted: 07/19/11 12:41 PM ET Updated: 09/18/11 06:12 AM ET

PHOENIX -- A giant wall of dust rolled through the Phoenix area on Monday, turning the sky brown, creating dangerous driving conditions and delaying some airline flights.

The dust, also known as a haboob in Arabic and around Arizona, formed in Pinal County and headed northeast, reaching Phoenix at about 5:30 p.m.

The dust wall was about 3,000 feet high and created winds of 25 to 30 mph, with gusts of up to 40 mph, said Austin Jamison, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. Visibility was down to less than a quarter-mile in some areas, he said.

"You have suddenly very poor visibilities that come on with all the dense dust in the air," he said. "With poor visibilities, that makes for dangerous driving conditions and that's arguably the biggest impact."

There were no immediate reports of accidents on roadways because of the storm, which began to clear within an hour of moving in. The Arizona Department of Public Safety did not immediately return a request for information about road conditions.

Some departing flights at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport were delayed because of the storm, said airport spokeswoman Julie Rodriguez.

Incoming flights from nearby cities including Los Angeles were being held until the storm cleared, she said. She did not know how many flights were delayed or whether any were canceled.


Walt Donovan took this photo from Chandler, Arizona, a suburb of Phoenix, when the dust storm hit the city.

Another giant dust storm in Arizona caught worldwide attention on July 5. That storm brought a mile-high wall of dust that halted airline flights, knocked out power for hundreds of people and turned swimming pools into mud pits.

Jamison said Monday's storm was not as powerful or as large as the last one, and didn't last as long.

"It's kind of like a ripple in a pond where it spreads out, slows down and fades out," he said.

Rodriguez said visibility at the airport was better Monday than it was during the July 5 storm, which grounded flights for 45 minutes.

"It's not as bad as it was," she said. "It's reduced but it's not terrible."

Weather officials say haboobs only happen in Arizona, the Sahara desert and parts of the Middle East because of dry conditions and large amounts of sand.

Pollution levels skyrocket during dust storms and create even more breathing problems for people with asthma and other similar conditions.

The dust also brings increases in a disease known as Valley Fever, a fungal pneumonia. Valley Fever thrives in the hot and arid Southwest in dirt found just a few feet beneath the earth's surface; it can be stirred up by construction, wind and other activity.

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Associated Press writer Michelle Price contributed to this report.

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PHOENIX -- A giant wall of dust rolled through the Phoenix area on Monday, turning the sky brown, creating dangerous driving conditions and delaying some airline flights. The dust, also known as a ...
PHOENIX -- A giant wall of dust rolled through the Phoenix area on Monday, turning the sky brown, creating dangerous driving conditions and delaying some airline flights. The dust, also known as a ...
PHOENIX -- A giant wall of dust rolled through the Phoenix area on Monday, turning the sky brown, creating dangerous driving conditions and delaying some airline flights. The dust, also known as a ...
PHOENIX -- A giant wall of dust rolled through the Phoenix area on Monday, turning the sky brown, creating dangerous driving conditions and delaying some airline flights. The dust, also known as a ...
 
 
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10:35 AM on 07/21/2011
Residents of Phoenix and Tucson have effectively changed their weather patterns by creating a humidity dome with their air conditioners and sprawling lawns/golf courses. Within a couple of decades the population will be running out of water, yet they still insist on the "greening" of the Sonoran desert.
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eaarth2
“An era ends when its illusions are exhausted
07:02 AM on 07/21/2011
This type of an event could be commonplace in 20 years through the mid to lower Great Plains, and the south west.
06:37 AM on 07/21/2011
Incorrect to say that this storm is called a haboob around Phoenix. It has NEVER been called that until recently. NEVER.
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deepintheheartoftejas
Middle o/t Road = Yellow stripes & dead armadillos
08:57 AM on 07/22/2011
Meteorologists say it's been a jargon term in the discipline for decades in the US.
09:33 PM on 07/27/2011
So have a lot of words but they aren't used on TV.
01:32 PM on 07/22/2011
As a former resident of the Phoenix area, you are lying.

It was called that back in the 1980s by people and the news media.
09:02 PM on 07/27/2011
I totally disagree. Media is my business and I know for a fact that they have NEVER called it that until recently. And it was at the urging of a news consultant, btw.
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whyus
San Francisco native
12:44 AM on 07/21/2011
Yes, I've heard of Valley Fever from my doctor when I had pneumonia a long time ago. True, it's dangerous. Poor Arizona.
thebigbike
ran away to be a cowboy
10:35 PM on 07/20/2011
as mentioned, those dust storms carry spores of VAlley Fever, which can be a devastating disease, starting off for many folks as just what seems like a particularly nasty bout with influenza, but for the unfortunate few continues on to a host of miserable symptoms, much as Lyme Disease does.

There is no vaccine. Not really enough folks get it to make development financially attractive to for-profit pharma.
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hdohighdesertobserver
The high desert is a place in between
04:12 PM on 07/20/2011
Every couple of years, there's suddenly a new word for sandstorm taken from from another language just to add human interest to ... a sandstorm! For the record, I had never heard the word 'haboob' before the last big sandstorm and I haven't met anyone else who had, either, but I guarantee that the next new name for sandstorm will sound even more lame even than haboob.
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MarkBoston
at least it's Lemon meringue !
03:05 PM on 07/20/2011
there have been multiple ufo sighting around these dust storms
02:04 PM on 07/20/2011
Me an my dauqhter were home when it hit. It was quiet an then we heard this loud "whoomp and then the wind" The sound was the 50 mph dust storm slammin into our house, we thouqh it was rain..it kind of looked like rain. When we went to the front door leaves and dust blew into the house. No there was no warninq. It kind of looked like a TS or Cat 1 hurricane...it was kind of cool thouqh
07:46 AM on 07/20/2011
Are they able to alert citizens of the dust storm in advance?
03:51 AM on 07/20/2011
Those are some really big Haboobs!
10:20 PM on 07/19/2011
Didn't Casey ANthony just arrive in Arizona?? Just saying
01:33 PM on 07/22/2011
So did Bristol and Sarah Palin.
09:53 PM on 07/19/2011
I know the last President blamed the Mexicans for the fires in Arizona Now someone on this blog joking or not joking blames the Mexicans for this dust storm. I say it is The Lord God-Jesus Christ, because of the way Arizona People are shooting innocent Mexican People when The Lord God-Jesus Christ said we are made in his Image--Jew,Gentile,Greek, etc.... Most Mexican People are Christian and Believe in Jesus Christ as The Lord God!!! So The Lord God-Jesus Christ does Avenge His People!!
12:28 AM on 07/20/2011
In the words of a great American Icon , Edith Bunker . When asked " why did God put much misery in the world" replied "So when we get to heaven, we'll notice the improvement".
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beyondliberal
Forward, never straight.
01:58 PM on 07/20/2011
That "president" you referred to is John McCain.
You're rather overdoing it with the religious stuff.
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tastles2001
09:51 PM on 07/19/2011
Please pardon my ignorance,but what the heck is a haboob cus to the best of my knowledge that is call a sandstorm,been in one myself while visiting Egypt, but hey what do I know since we American have a way of sticking our head in the sand and renaming things is like SANDSTORM...Like it or not AZ is a desert,always has been always will be.
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planetjeffy
On the other hand, you have different fingers.
09:39 PM on 07/19/2011
dust storms and 120 heat
no wonder they are so angry in AZ
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Aaron Watkins
Ă€ Rebours
07:20 AM on 07/21/2011
All of the illegals running around shooting people adds to the fire.
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planetjeffy
On the other hand, you have different fingers.
06:42 PM on 07/21/2011
links please
09:19 PM on 07/19/2011
Be American. It's called a sandstorm.
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deepintheheartoftejas
Middle o/t Road = Yellow stripes & dead armadillos
09:13 AM on 07/22/2011
Yes. If there are two things conservatives are terrified of, it's foreigners and boobs.

I wonder what the American term for algebra is.
08:47 AM on 07/24/2011
Agreed... Sandstorm and dust-storm are perfectly good terms, and there is no need for utilizing foreign words, no mater how amusing or "all-inclusive" someone feels they need to be...