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By DAILY MAIL REPORTERA brave driver seems to head straight into midnight from the afternoon along a short stretch of road in Phoenix, thanks to the massive dust storm that hit the Arizona city Tuesday evening.
In the video posted on YouTube, the driver goes from typical city streets to a hellish scene of pitch black over just a few moments.
Driving straight for the heart of the dusty beast, the sky turns from ashen to completely black, and passing cars can only be glimpsed at the last moment, when their headlights are able to pierce the black a few feet.
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The massive dust storm descended quickly on the Phoenix area, drastically reducing visibility and delaying flights as strong winds downed trees and left thousands of residents without power.
The dust cloud that moved across the Phoenix valley last night had formed in an afternoon storm in the Tucson area, and then rolled north across the desert before sweeping over the city like an enormous wave, said National Weather Service meteorologist Paul Iniguez.
Radar data showed the storm's towering dust wall had reached as high as 8,000 to 10,000ft, or nearly two miles, he said.
These kinds of storms are also called haboobs, from an Arabic word, and they can occur in virtually any dry area, from much of the Middle East to the American Southwest.
In the U.S., the storms are most common in parts of Arizona, New Mexico and Texas. They occurred in a wider swath of the Great Plains during the Dust Bowl era of the 1930s as well.
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Dark day: As the driver passes into the dust storm, the daylight starts to get filtered out, and visibility drops sharply
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The winds in haboobs are often 20 to 30 miles per hour. That's not enough to cause extensive damage, but the storms do often take down limbs or dead trees.
That certainly was the case in Arizona this week, as many residents lost power or had lawn chairs and other light items blown around.
After the storm moved through, dust settled over everything, making clean-up a big headache.
No word on what this brave driver's car must have looked like after his voyage through the darkness.
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Dwarfed by nature: The high-rise buildings of the city are humbled by the massive dust storm, which is a regular feature of Arizona's monsoon season from now until the end of September. Even so, this is a larger-than-normal storm
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'This was pretty significant. We heard from a lot of people who lived here for a number of storms and this was the worst they'd seen,' Iniguez explained.
By the time the dust cloud neared the metropolitan area, it had started to dissolve but it still towered over the city with a wall of at least 5,000ft, according to the weather service.
KSAZ-TV in Phoenix reported the storm appeared to be exceptionally wide in some spots. It briefly covered the city's downtown at around nightfall.
The storm was part of the Arizona monsoon season, which typically starts in mid-June and lasts through September.
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The National Weather Service says strong winds with gusts of up to more than 60 mph in some places rapidly moved the dust cloud northwest through Phoenix and the surrounding cities of Avondale, Tempe and Scottsdale.
More than a dozen communities in the area also were placed under a severe thunderstorm watch until 11pm.
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'Where we are, it looks like Mount Saint Helens,' Jeff Lane, a spokesman with the Salt River Project utility, said.
'It looks like we had an eruption with all the dust that's all over the parking lot,' he added.
The storm downed trees, tossed yard furniture, and snuffed out visibility across an area of some 50 miles at its peak on Tuesday evening, although there were no reports of any fatalities.
The National Weather Service office in Phoenix called the dust storm 'very large and historic', in a statement posted on its website, describing the blow as an 'impressive event'.
Residents rushed inside as sand from the storm blasted the area in winds of up to 50 miles per hour, NWS reported. Near zero visibility forced drivers to stop on area roads until the worst of the storm passed.
Flights at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport returned to normal on Wednesday after the storm caused interruptions on Tuesday evening with a few flights cancelled, some diverted to other airports and a dozen delayed, said airport spokeswoman Julie Rodriguez.
A barrage of dust set off fire alarms in the terminal, but crews quickly cleared the mess from the storm.
Driving into AZ Haboob HD
Phoenix Dust Storm Timelapse July 5, 2011
The Phoenix Haboob of July 5th, 2011 from Mike Olbinski on Vimeo.
source: dailymail Newsfwdmail 07 Jul, 2011
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Source: http://newsfwdmail.blogspot.com/2011/07/caught-on-video-moment-driver-is.html
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