Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The wind is whistling a lonely but sweet tune. This desert wind, a gentle erratic wind, has no name. It is a sad, empty wind, a wind that is as uncertain as the lives lived by many of the people who have chosen the Mojave as their home. This wind sounds desert lonely. This wind touches me through the open window.

  2. Desert Winds High School. 415 East Kettering Street Lancaster, CA 93534. Phone: (661) 948-7555. Utility Pages; AV Union High School District. 176 Holston Drive Lancaster, CA 93535. Phone: (661) 948-7655. Facebook (opens in new window/tab) Twitter (opens in new window/tab)

  3. With Desert Winds Wireless, you don’t have to sacrifice fast, affordable internet service! Our extensive network of broadcast towers provides reliable, high-speed internet throughout Colville and the surrounding areas. We have flexible, customizable plans for both business and residential customers. For Colville, call (509) 685-0403.

  4. Wind is the primary sculptor of a desert’s hills of sand, called dunes. Wind builds dunes that rise as high as 180 meters (590 feet). Dunes migrate constantly with the wind. They usually shift a few meters a year, but a particularly violent sandstorm can move a dune 20 meters (65 feet) in a single day.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Desert_WindDesert Wind - Wikipedia

    Desert Wind. The Desert Wind was an Amtrak long-distance passenger train that ran from 1979 to 1997. It operated from Chicago to Los Angeles as a section of the California Zephyr, serving Los Angeles via Salt Lake City; Ogden, Utah; and Las Vegas .

  6. 19 de oct. de 2023 · "The wind in this part of the world blows always from the same direction," he says. "It's very consistent and very predictable." The landscape and geography of the site is what causes the special winds. The area's daily temperature changes create strong, predictable wind streams that travel between Lake Turkana and the desert hinterland.

  7. Sirocco. A sirocco is a hot desert wind that blows northward from the Sahara toward the Mediterranean coast of Europe. More broadly, it is used for any kind of hot, oppressive wind. She had begun by saying that it was coming over her, after all, that Rome was a ponderously sad place. The sirocco was gently blowing, the air was heavy, she was ...