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Raindrops carried up into the atmosphere freeze and create hail. The storm's strong winds tossed the hailstones back and forth, adding additional layers of ice.
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If there are no more triple-digit days this year, we'll have a grand total of 78. That’s the second most ever recorded. (2011 holds the record with 90.)
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Mosquitoes have hidden in the extreme heat, but the recent rain may bring them out again this week.
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Rain bands from the remnants of Tropical Storm Harold are putting a cap on 45 straight days of triple-digit heat.
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Austin's "official" weather station at Camp Mabry usually shows it's hotter out than the weather station at the Austin airport. The reason has to do with where the thermometers are located.
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With just two weeks left, meteorologists say it is likely this summer will surpass 2011 as Austin’s hottest ever.
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Early signs suggested it might not be that bad. Then a heat dome settled in. Here's why is got — and stayed — so hot.
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Austin is on track for one of its hottest summers ever recorded after a July that averaged 90.8 degrees.
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You may have heard we’re in another El Niño year. But meteorologists say another weather phenomenon is responsible for Texas’ current heat wave.
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Most of the state is under a heat advisory or a heat warning through Tuesday as high temperatures are expected to remain in the triple digits for the rest of the month.