The Cheyenne Office of the National Weather Service is warning southeast Wyoming residents about temperatures that could plunge to -15 degrees or colder.
The agency posted the following on its website:
Winter is approaching! After a brief warm up for the middle of this week, a potent cold front followed by reinforcing arctic air will push through the region. We are currently looking at high temperatures well below average in the single digits to teens Saturday, with even colder temperatures Sunday. Below is a graphic showing the Day Time Highs / Morning Lows for several locations for Thursday through Monday. These are subject to change over the coming days, but very cold air will return late this week.
Cheyenne, Laramie Forecasts
Cheyenne Forecast
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This Afternoon
Mostly sunny, with a high near 32. Breezy, with a northwest wind 15 to 20 mph, with gusts as high as 30 mph.
Tonight
Mostly clear, with a low around 14. West northwest wind around 15 mph.
Wednesday
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Sunny, with a high near 42. Breezy, with a west northwest wind 10 to 20 mph.
Wednesday Night
Mostly clear, with a low around 21. West wind 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday
Sunny, with a high near 51. West southwest wind 5 to 15 mph.
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Thursday Night
Mostly clear, with a low around 28.
Friday
A 50 percent chance of snow showers after 11am. Partly sunny, with a high near 40.
Friday Night
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Snow showers. Cloudy, with a low around 3.
Saturday
Snow showers likely, mainly before 11am. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 11. Blustery.
Saturday Night
A chance of snow showers, mainly before 11pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around -12.
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Sunday
A slight chance of snow showers. Partly sunny and cold, with a high near 5.
Sunday Night
Partly cloudy, with a low around -13.
M.L.King Day
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Mostly sunny, with a high near 12.
Laramie Forecast
This Afternoon
A 20 percent chance of snow showers before 2pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 23. Northwest wind around 15 mph.
Tonight
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Partly cloudy, with a low around 4. Wind chill values between -10 and zero. Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
Wednesday
Sunny, with a high near 32. Wind chill values between -10 and zero. South southwest wind around 10 mph.
Wednesday Night
Mostly clear, with a low around 15. Southwest wind around 10 mph.
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Thursday
Sunny, with a high near 41. West southwest wind 10 to 15 mph.
Thursday Night
Mostly clear, with a low around 22.
Friday
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A 50 percent chance of snow showers after 11am. Partly sunny, with a high near 33.
Friday Night
Snow showers. Cloudy, with a low around 0.
Saturday
Snow showers likely, mainly before 11am. Mostly cloudy and cold, with a high near 7.
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Saturday Night
A chance of snow showers, mainly before 11pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around -15.
Sunday
A slight chance of snow showers. Partly sunny and cold, with a high near 2.
Sunday Night
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A slight chance of snow showers. Mostly cloudy, with a low around -15.
M.L.King Day
Mostly sunny and cold, with a high near 8.
Meet the Four-Legged Heroes of the Cheyenne Police Department
They may not be able to leap tall buildings in a single bound, but make no bones about it, police dogs play a vital role in the fight against crime.
In many situations, they’re the first ones to put their lives on the line to protect their human partners, proving that not all heroes wear capes, some wear fur coats.
It took the U.S. Supreme Court 12 words and one period to dismiss more than 300 pages of legal arguments in which Utah, Wyoming and other Western states sought to establish control and ownership of millions of acres of federally managed public land.
Utah, Wyoming’s lone U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, state legislators, Gov. Mark Gordon and many others sought an emergency hearing to argue that the federal government illegally owns property that rightfully belongs to Western states. Wyoming and other parties filed briefs of their own supporting the Beehive State’s assertion that federal ownership was detrimental to those commonwealths.
The filings appear to be unappreciated by the justices.
“The motion for leave to file a bill of complaint is denied,” the court said in an order filed Monday.
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Utah’s petition generated another 424 pages of legal entreaties by its supporters and critics, a count that includes rebuttals by the United States and the Ute Tribe.
Utah claimed the federal government could not own and control “unappropriated lands,” which are those not specifically designated for use by an enumerated federal power. Utah targeted 18.5 million acres of Bureau of Land Management property belonging to all Americans.
Beehivers first said they wanted the court to “dispose” of the BLM property, then clarified that the state just wanted the court to say it is unconstitutional for the government to hold “unappropriated” acreage.
Hageman claimed that federal ownership is an occupation equivalent to a casus belli, a situation that justifies war or conflict between nations. “[T]he standard is whether the federal government’s actions would amount to an invasion and conquest of that land if—assuming a counterfactual—Utah were a separate sovereign nation,” Hageman’s filing states.
Twenty-six Wyoming lawmakers also saddled up for Utah, urging the court to take up the case and saying their support does not mean they will not seek other federal property for the Equality State. The perturbed posse said its claims could extend to “all former federal territorial lands … now held by the United States … [including] parks, monuments, wilderness, etc.”
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Six of the sympathetic signatories — Sens. Tim French (R-Powell), Larry Hicks (R-Baggs), Bob Ide (R-Casper), John Kolb (R-Rock Springs), Dan Laursen (R-Powell) and Cheri Steinmetz (R- Lingle) — voted for a draft bill that would allocate $75 million for the Legislature, independent of the executive branch or other state entities, to litigate against the federal government. Senate File 41 “Federal acts-legal actions authorized” will be considered when the Legislature convenes today.
Gordon was more reserved in Wyoming’s official state plea, alleging “harms that federal ownership … uniquely imposes on western States on a daily basis” as a reason for the Supreme Court to immediately take up the case.
CASPER, Wyo. — The University of Wyoming has produced several NFL players currently making an impact. Here’s how they did in the most recent week’s slate of games.
Josh Allen, Buffalo Bills
Buffalo Bills star quarterback Josh Allen delivered another gem on Sunday, helping his team advance to the divisional round of the playoffs with a 31-7 drubbing of the Denver Broncos.
Allen threw a pair of touchdowns and finished with 272 yards on 20-26 passing. He also picked up another 46 yards on the ground. In the first half, Allen was conservative with his passes, mostly handing the ball off to his running backs or picking up yardage of his own with the ground game. In the second half, though, Denver’s secondary was hapless to stop him as he found his receivers time and again.
Allen also managed to pass Bills legend Jim Kelly on the franchise’s leaderboard for most postseason touchdowns. He now has 23 in 11 games.
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Allen and the Bills will face the Baltimore Ravens in the divisional round on Jan. 18.
Frank Crum, Denver Broncos
Frank Crum, a rookie offensive lineman for the Broncos, did not take the field in his team’s season-ending loss to Allen and the Bills.
This season, Crum appeared in six games. He has not played since Week 8, though.
A melting ice patch in the Rocky Mountains has revealed the remains of up to 5,900-year-old trees that could offer insights into past climate conditions, according to new research.
Scientists discovered more than 30 dead whitebark pine trees (Pinus albicaulis) that were entombed in ice for millennia, according to a new paper published late last month in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
They found the previously hidden stand of trees on the Beartooth Plateau in northwest Wyoming, which is part of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. The whitebark pines were lying flat but had been preserved in good condition, suggesting they were rapidly enveloped by ice.
The trees were recently exposed when the ice patch began melting due to hotter temperatures related to human-caused climate change, reports New Scientist’s Taylor Mitchell Brown. In the same area, receding ice patches have also revealed fragments of wooden hunting weapons, including one that was more than 10,000 years old.
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“The plateau seems to have been the perfect place to allow for ice patches to establish and persist for thousands of years, recording important information on past climate, human activity and environmental change,” says study lead author Greg Pederson, a paleoclimatologist for the United States Geological Survey, in a statement.
The trees are located 10,140 feet above sea level, which is roughly 590 feet higher than the region’s current tree line. (The tree line, also known as timberline, marks the edge of a high-elevation habitat that can support trees. Above this invisible marker, the conditions are too harsh for trees to grow.) This suggests the region’s climate was once warmer than it is today.
By studying the trees’ rings and using radiocarbon dating techniques, researchers were able to determine that they lived 5,950 to 5,440 years ago. Then, they looked at data from Arctic ice core samples to understand what the climate was like during that time, a period known as the mid-Holocene.
The trees were alive during an era of falling temperatures, which have been linked with ongoing volcanic eruptions. As volcanoes in the Northern Hemisphere erupted, they spewed so much debris into the air that they blocked sunlight from reaching the surface, which caused temperatures to drop.
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Eventually, around 5,100 years ago, it seemingly became so cold that the trees at that high elevation could no longer survive. The chilly weather also caused a nearby ice patch to expand and engulf the whitebark pines.
The trees are “a valuable ‘time capsule’ that tells us not only about these mountain forests 6,000 years ago, but about the climate conditions that allowed them to exist,” says Kevin Anchukaitis, a paleoclimatologist at the University of Arizona who was not involved with the research, to New Scientist.
By learning more about the region’s past climate, scientists say they can more accurately predict the future. If global temperatures continue to rise, for example, they expect trees to start growing at higher elevations, so long as they have enough moisture.
“Year-over-year records, as well as decadal records and even century-level records are exceedingly important,” study co-author Craig Lee, a researcher of environmental archaeology at Montana State University, tells the Billings Gazette’s Brett French. “They provide comparative data points for allowing us to contextualize our more nuanced observations of the current climate that we experience today.”
Today, the whitebark pine is considered “threatened” under the Endangered Species Act. These trees face several stressors, including rising temperatures, drought and wildfires. They’re also battling a pest called the mountain pine beetle and a deadly invasive fungus called white pine blister rust.
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Healthy whitebark pines can live for hundreds of years—and sometimes survive up to 1,000 years. They grow at high elevations throughout the western United States and Canada, providing food for red squirrels, grizzly bears, Clark’s nutcrackers and many other creatures. They also play an important role in their high-elevation ecosystems, as they provide shade that helps keep snow cold and stable.
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