Two dust storms, also known as haboobs, enveloped regions in Texas and New Mexico Monday afternoon, creating unsafe road ...
A haboob (pronounced “huh-boob”) is a dust storm that appears like an advancing wall of dust and debris thousands of feet ...
A massive dust storm buried parts of New Mexico and Texas in airborne smut Monday morning, shutting down highways and leaving ...
Wild video captured a massive dust storm known as a “haboob” that caused car crashes, shut down major highways and left the ...
A massive dust storm buried parts of New Mexico and Texas in airborne smut ... The dust storm — a particularly fierce variety known as a “haboob” — was miles wide and thousands of feet ...
New Mexico law enforcement officials closed parts of Interstates 10 and 25 as well as US Highway 70 because of the “dangerous, life-threatening” travel conditions.
A massive haboob dust storm caused widespread chaos in Dallas this week, reducing visibility, triggering car crashes, and leaving the area blanketed in an eerie red fog.
The dust storm, known meteorologically as a haboob, swept across Deming and Doña Ana counties in New Mexico at a breakneck pace with near-zero visibility and winds of 45 mph, the National Weather ...
Road closures were in place in New Mexico and Texas until Monday night. Video shared on social media showed a driver ...
The National Weather Service Prediction Center said on X that Monday afternoon, "travel hazardous" throughout the middle and ...
The dust storm, known as a haboob, swept across parts of New Mexico at a rapid pace with near zero visibility and winds of 45 miles per hour.
Winds topping 30 and 40 miles per hour brought in a thick layer of dust across Central Texas.