Monday, April 8, 2013

When Weather Changes, Grasshopper Turns Locust

As recently as 1963, plagues of ravenous desert locusts could stretch across continents, blanketing lands from West Africa to India up to 14 years at a time. Today, with pesticides and early eradication efforts, such biblical swarms no longer occur

MOBILE, Alabama — Fog could be a problem this morning, so drive with your low beams on. Patchy fog should burn off by 8 a.m. and skies will be mostly sunny the rest of the day, according to the National Weather Service.

KANSAS CITY, Kansas — Forecasters called for strong hail and possible tornadoes in western Kansas and a blizzard in four other states on Monday in the first of what are expected to be several days of nasty weather in the

Turns out Americans aren't the only people who want to know what the weather's going to be like tomorrow. On Monday, aerospace and defense firm Exelis (NYSE: XLS ) announced that it has won a "multimillion dollar" contract to build an advanced

As recently as 1963, plagues of ravenous desert locusts could stretch across continents, blanketing lands from West Africa to India up to 14 years at a time. Today, with pesticides and early eradication efforts, such biblical swarms no longer occur

Related External Links


When Weather Changes, Grasshopper Turns Locust

No comments:

Post a Comment