New Mexico
State Police investigate deadly pedestrian crash on I-40 in Albuquerque
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — New Mexico State Police is investigating a deadly pedestrian crash that left westbound Interstate 40 closed for hours in Albuquerque.
It happened early Tuesday morning at Eubank Boulevard The westbound lanes closed at Juan Tabo Boulevard around 6:30 a.m.
Westbound I-40 is back open. Further details are limited at this time. Albuquerque Police Department confirmed NMSP is investigating.
New Mexico
Virgin Galactic partners with nonprofit for menstruation research in space
Virgin Galactic is partnering with the nonprofit group Operation Period to research menstruation in space.
NEW MEXICO – Virgin Galactic plans a research flight on menstruation in space, aiming to study how microgravity could affect hormones and menstrual cycles on longer trips.
Virgin Galactic is partnering with the nonprofit group Operation Period to research menstruation in space.
The company plans to launch flights next year, and one of them will focus on the effects of microgravity on menstruation.
Two women researchers are currently training for the flight.
They say they hope to reveal how future space travel could affect hormones and the menstrual cycle, especially over long durations in space.
New Mexico
Patrick M. Brenner: New Mexico can’t afford permitting paralysis | Alamogordo News
New Mexico
Storms continue across eastern New Mexico into Friday
Grant’s Thursday Evening Forecast
Showers and thunderstorms will continue in eastern New Mexico tonight into Friday. Breezy winds will bring an elevated fire danger in the western half of the state.
Thunderstorms are firing up Thursday afternoon along and east of New Mexico’s central mountain chain while gusty south winds over 30 mph are driving an elevated fire danger across western parts of the state. Storms will continue spreading across eastern New Mexico through this evening, bringing locally heavy rainfall, lightning, small hail, and gusty winds. The winds will weaken later tonight, but showers and thunderstorms will keep going across eastern New Mexico overnight into early Friday morning.
A few spotty storms will redevelop Friday afternoon across eastern New Mexico, with a couple near the Texas state line capable of turning strong to severe. At the same time, breezy southwest winds will ramp back up across western New Mexico, with gusts over 35 mph creating another round of elevated fire danger. Storms will push east out of New Mexico Friday evening while winds gradually ease overnight.
Quieter and drier weather takes over this weekend. Temperatures Saturday afternoon will cool a few degrees but still stay near average for late May. Breezy afternoon winds will continue Saturday before lighter winds and warmer temperatures return Sunday.
Moisture will start building back into eastern New Mexico Monday, bringing a slight chance for thunderstorms near the Texas state line. Monday will also be the hottest day of the warming trend statewide. More moisture spreads into the eastern half of the state Tuesday, increasing storm chances along and east of the Rio Grande Valley by afternoon. Even deeper moisture arrives statewide by Wednesday and Thursday, fueling more widespread showers and thunderstorms through the middle of next week.
-
Alabama1 minute agoA path to employment for Alabama individuals with a criminal background
-
Arizona11 minutes agoArizona GOP attorney general debate turns personal with insults, name-calling
-
Arkansas16 minutes agoArkansas men’s track and field sends 21 entries to NCAA Outdoor Championships | Whole Hog Sports
-
California23 minutes agoCalifornia just handed oil companies billions in free pollution permits
-
Colorado26 minutes agoCongress looks to help fund new control tower at growing Northern Colorado airport
-
Connecticut31 minutes agoAre high gas prices fueling rise in Connecticut deadly motorcycle crashes?
-
Delaware38 minutes agoThe best Delaware high schools for athletes? According to one study, these are top 25
-
Florida41 minutes agoAs Florida debates property tax relief, a local official analyzed the potential impact on South Florida