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An atmospheric river was pummeling Southern California with heavy rain on Thursday, prompting evacuations and school closures as heavy mudslides and flooding hit areas charred by the wildfires ...
The storm is expected to dump 1 to 2 inches of rain along the coast and up to 4 inches in the valleys at rates that could cause problems. Some roads will be closed starting Wednesday.
Photos captured the impact of the atmospheric river that triggered mudslides and significant floods in Southern California this week. Evacuation warnings were issued for vulnerable locations ...
Southern California has been jolted by a strong earthquake near San Diego. The U.S. Geological Survey says Monday morning's earthquake had a preliminary magnitude of 5.2 and was near the mountain town ...
Read more on our AI policy here. An updated flood watch was issued by the NWS San Diego CA on Thursday at 1:29 p.m. in effect until 6 p.m. The watch is for San Diego County Coastal Areas ...
Thursday morning is expected to remain mostly dry around Southern California but forecasters warn that thunderstorms could produce heavy downpours later in the day. “Could be starting as early as ...
A powerful storm pounded Southern California early Thursday, triggered evacuations warnings amid concerns that heavy rains could unleash damaging floods and debris flows in areas recently ...
A 5.2 magnitude earthquake shook Southern California on Monday, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The quake was centered in San Diego County but was felt as far north as Los Angeles. No ...
Now, with another big storm bearing down on Southern California, we're once again hearing from people who say it's all very hard to follow. And guess what? Flood terms have their own alphabet soup.
LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- Southern California will continue seeing cooler conditions this Monday before a gradual warm-up by the weekend. Los Angeles and Orange counties Monday will see morning clouds ...
The most recent risk assessment, outlined in maps published by the California Geological Survey, illustrate the devastation possible from extreme-but-realistic scenarios.
According to the United States Geological Survey, the quake was centered south of Julian, Calif., at a depth of 13.4 km.