1970 - Widespread flooding took place across Puerto Rico. Rainfall amounts for the day ranged up to seventeen inches at Aibonito. A slow moving tropical depression was responsible for six days of torrential rains across the island. Totals in the Eastern Interior Division averaged thirty inches, with 38.4 inches at Jayuya. Flooding claimed eighteen lives, and resulted in 62 million dollars damage.
More on this and other weather history
Day: Widespread frost and patchy fog before 10am. Sunny, with a high near 74. South wind around 2 mph.
Night: Patchy frost after 5am. Mostly clear, with a low around 35. South southeast wind around 2 mph.
Day: Areas of frost before 10am. Sunny, with a high near 77. Southeast wind around 3 mph.
Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 36. East wind around 2 mph.
Day: A slight chance of rain before noon. Sunny, with a high near 76. Chance of precipitation is 20%.
Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 36.
Day: A chance of rain before 9am, then a chance of rain and patchy fog. Partly sunny, with a high near 77.
Night: Rain likely. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 38.
Day: Rain. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 61.
Night: Rain. Cloudy, with a low around 33.
Day: Rain. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 54.
Night: A chance of rain before 3am, then a chance of rain and snow. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 26.
Day: Patchy fog and a chance of rain and snow. Partly sunny, with a high near 54.
Mon's High Temperature
100 at 7 Miles East-southeast Of Hidalgo, TX and 2 Miles North-northeast Of La Puerta, TX and Mcallen, TX
Mon's Low Temperature
11 at 32 Miles West-southwest Of Bynum, MT
Troy is a city in Lincoln County, Montana, United States. The population was 797 at the 2020 census. It lies at the lowest elevation of any settlement in Montana. The town is on U.S. Route 2, near Montana Highway 56, in the Kootenai River gorge by the Kootenai National Forest.
Originally inhabited by the Kutenai, Salish, and Piegan Blackfeet tribes, the area was settled by miners in the 1880s. Troy was registered as a town in 1892 and grew quickly after the Great Northern Railway built a freight station there, leading to a boom in workers, miners, their families, and associates. The area narrowly missed wildfire damage in 1910 and expanded its services throughout the following years, though its population would drop due to a series of misfortunes in the late 1920s before rebounding in the following decades. Troy suffered from the area's contamination from nearby vermiculite mines contaminated with particularly fragile asbestos, leading to the town's inclusion in the United States Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) National Priorities List status in 2002 and Public Health Emergency event in 2009. According to the EPA, most risk was reduced by 2015.
Troy is on U.S. Route 2, between Yaak and Libby. Montana Highway 56 is three miles southeast and the Troy Airport is two miles northwest. The town's economy has historically been supported by mining and logging, while in recent times, mining has remained, with the addition of education, retail, and tourism. Local natural features such as the Kootenai Falls have attracted tourism to the area and have been featured in movies such as The River Wild (1994) and The Revenant (2015). There is a public school district (which created ceramic ornaments used to decorate the National Christmas Tree in 2017) and a public library, and the town is in-district for Flathead Valley Community College.
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