The Great Olympic Blowdown, also called the Big Blow, was a compact, intense windstorm that struck the coast of Washington on January 29, 1921. The storm is remembered for the massive number of trees destroyed. At the time, it was the greatest loss of timber in the country, according to the Forest Service.[1] In the twentieth century, only the Columbus Day Storm of 1962 was stronger.[2]
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The GreatOlympicBlowdown, also called the Big Blow, was a compact, intense windstorm that struck the coast of Washington on January 29, 1921. The storm...
Big Blow may refer to: An 1880 storm on the Great Lakes Great Lakes Storm of 1913 GreatOlympicBlowdown of 1921 Columbus Day Storm of 1962 The Big Blow...
portal Canada portal Hanukkah Eve windstorm of 2006 Great Coastal Gale of 2007 GreatOlympicBlowdown of 1921 October 2009 North American storm complex...
nor'easters usually blow from the northeast. 1880: Great Gale of 1880 1921: January 29, the GreatOlympicBlowdown. 1962: Columbus Day Storm began life as tropical...
from the plate. Also a purpose pitch or chin music. Archaic usage: "a blowdown". A player batting between .100 and .199 is said to be batting "a buck...
Essential Media & Entertainment, 14 January 2010, retrieved 3 November 2021 Blowdown (Documentary, Action), Parallax Film Productions, 25 June 2008, retrieved...
featured on the second series premiere of the National Geographic show Blowdown. An Indianapolis nonprofit, People for Urban Progress, rescued 13 acres...
vegetation was dense and richly diverse. Disturbances such as tornado, blowdown, and ice storms were common events that created a random mosaic of small...
Waters – Canadian derecho, commonly referred to as "the Boundary Waters blowdown". Although campsites and portages were quickly cleared after the storm...
accident. Several level indicators failed, leading to overfilling of a blowdown drum, and light hydrocarbons concentrated at ground level throughout the...
aspects of the operation are usually more than the minimum. Compression or blowdown to storage depth is generally at a limited rate to minimize the risk of...
form), meaning "people of the forest", from Proto-Slavic *dręzga ("woods, blowdowns"). Dresden later evolved into the capital of Saxony. Around the late 12th...
resistance management of their diving watches. On the initial and any later blowdown or compression, most saturation divers consciously open the water-resistant...