Thunderstorms and wind gusts in northwest Arizona and south of Las Vegas died out Saturday evening and are not expected to pose significant issues overnight.
Marvin Clemons
Marvin joined Reviewjournal.com in March 2019 after a 7.5-year stint on the assignment desk at KSNV News 3. He started his newspaper career (via school of hard knocks) several decades ago in Utah after service in the U.S. Air Force, and eventually spent 25 years in the Chicago newspaper market before the industry downsizing in 2011 made him and wife Julie move West. They have six children and 12 grandchildren still enjoying Midwest winters/summers.
Trying to find a way to beat the heat that can make the Las Vegas Valley feel like an oven at this time of year?
Some additional monsoon rain is possible this weekend in Las Vegas, according to the National Weather Service.
Monsoonal conditions and rainfall in the Las Vegas area over the past three nights is likely to be absent into the weekend, according to the National Weather Service.
Lightning flashed and thunder clapped above the Strip and downtown Las Vegas late Monday as monsoon weather brought another round of storms to the region.
Sunday night in the Las Vegas Valley got windy, and rainy thanks to the return of recently rare monsoon conditions, says the National Weather Service.
Former President Donald Trump was loudly cheered as he appeared at the UFC 264 bouts at T-Mobile Arena on Saturday night, according to media reports.
Las Vegas tied its all-time high temperature of 117 on Saturday evening, according to the National Weather Service.
Las Vegas snapped its high-temperature reading for the date with a blistering 116 degrees at McCarran International Airport on Friday. Death Valley hit 130.
The Nevada Highway Patrol troopers stopped a wrong-way driver and arrested the person on suspicion of driving under the influence Thursday night.
Weekend highs may reach 117 in Las Vegas and 131 at Death Valley, says the latest National Weather Service forecast.
Excessive heat — expected to reach 116 at the airport — will suffocate the Las Vegas region for the next five days, according to the National Weather Service.
The second hottest June on record appears to be progressing to an equally hot July.
A nearly week-long excessive heat watch for the entire Las Vegas region has been issued by the National Weather Service.
Lower humidity and higher temperatures are forecast Monday for the Las Vegas Valley, according to the National Weather Service.