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View Full Version : Tests planned on mysterious 'milky rain' in U.S. Pacific Northwest



mick silver
11th February 2015, 05:12 PM
By Courtney Sherwood
PORTLAND, Ore. (Reuters) - Scientists from two U.S. Pacific Northwest laboratories plan to conduct tests of unusual precipitation that fell across the region over the weekend in hopes of pinpointing the origins of so-called "milky rain" that has mystified residents, officials said on Wednesday.
Officials at both the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and the Benton Clean Air Agency, both in Washington state, said they had collected samples of the rain, which left a powdery residue on cars across a wide swath of the two states.
Scientists at the Richland lab said they believe the rain may have carried volcanic ash from an erupting volcano in Japan, while the clean air agency said its staffers believe dust from central Oregon was the culprit.
The National Weather Service has said it believes the powdery rain was most likely a byproduct of dust storms hundreds of miles away in Nevada, although it could not rule out volcanic ash from Japan as a possible culprit.
But the National Weather Service has also said it was not equipped to perform a chemical analysis of the rain that would be required to pinpoint its origins.
Wherever the milky precipitation came from, officials say they do not believe it poses any health risk. Air monitoring stations did not detect anything unusual while the rain was falling, said Robin Bresley Priddy, executive director of Benton Clean Air.
"We don't have any reason to think there's anything wrong, but there's no reason not to be cautious if you're concerned," she added. "You may want to wash it off your car with water, rather than with your hands, and avoid touching it and breathing it in."
(Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Eric Walsh)

Cebu_4_2
11th February 2015, 05:32 PM
WSU studying cause of 'milky rain'

Associated Press 1:03 p.m. PST February 10, 2015
http://www.gannett-cdn.com/-mm-/af78ad12916d379f5e71df1573a4dcd976e11067/c=75-0-523-337&r=x404&c=534x401/local/-/media/2015/02/10/KGW/KGW/635591689606123252-NWS-Spokane-milky-rain.jpg
(Photo: National Weather Service)


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SPOKANE, Wash. - A Washington State University researcher thinks he knows the cause of a mysterious "milky rain" that hit parts of the Pacific Northwest last Friday.

Meteorologist Nic Loyd says the dirty rain was the result of a rare weather phenomenon that began near an ancient saline lake nearly 500 miles away.
Loyd believes a meshing of weather systems that started in southern Oregon ultimately caused dirty-white-colored raindrops to fall in eastern Washington and northeast Oregon.

"It was an unusual convergence of weather factors that set up the event. Drifting ash from a volcanic eruption would have been easier to figure out," said Loyd of WSU's AgWeatherNet.

Originally, the large storm that hit northwest Nevada was blamed for the unusual-colored rainfall.

"But the trajectory just didn't add up," meteorologist Mary Wister of the Weather Service's Pendleton, Ore., office told WSU News. "The wind direction would have carried the dust into western Montana, not in your direction."
The National Weather Service received reports Friday of ashy debris coating vehicles and windows in more than 15 cities, including Spokane, the Tri-Cities, and Hermiston, Oregon.

While the ash-like substance has not yet been scientifically confirmed, the Weather Service says it's believed to be from a dust storm that struck Summer Lake on Thursday night.

Viewers of KREM 2 in Spokane wrote in several ideas about what could have caused it. The station put together a gallery of the most popular theories.