National Park Service National Park Service Arrowhead U.S. Department of the Interior NPS Digest:  NPS Gateway for Partners, Friends and Alumni
Daily Headlines

Daily Headlines
Home
NPS News
In the Press
Katrina
Incidents
Fire News
People News
Jobs
Training
Events Calendar
Nps.gov
Reports
Morning Report
ParkTips
NLC Journal

Today’s Almanac – Thursday, January 3, 2013

[Printer-friendly text version]

The Skies

Sun and Moon Data

To find sun and moon rising and setting times for your park or office, go to the U.S. Naval Observatory’s Complete Sun and Moon Data for One Day webpage.

Night Skies

An update on the moon, planets and night skies for January.

Visible planets during the period:

  • Mars is low in the southwest after sunset all month.
  • Jupiter is high in the east after sunset and is visible in the night sky until the early hours.
  • Venus rises shortly after twilight in early January but becomes progressively harder to see as the month goes on.
  • Saturn rises shortly before 3 a.m. local time on January 1st and then about 30 minutes earlier with each successive week.  

Calendar of upcoming celestial events:

  • Thursday, 1/3 – Peak of Quadrantid meteor shower. Under a dark sky in a typical year, it produces from 60 to 200 meteors per hour, with an average of about 120.
  • Sunday, 1/6 – The moon passes a few degrees south of Saturn.
  • Thursday, 1/10 – The moon passes three degrees north of Venus.
  • Friday, 1/11 – New moon (dark).
  • Sunday, 1/13 – The moon passes six degrees north of Mars.
  • Monday, 1/21 – The waxing moon passes a half degree south of Jupiter.
  • Saturday, 1/26 – Full moon.

For more information on stars, planets and other night sky phenomena, go to “The Sky This Week” page at the U.S. Naval Observatory page at http://www.usno.navy.mil/USNO/tours-events/sky-this-week

The Weather

Watches and Warnings

The principal watches and warnings posted as of early this morning were as follows. Note that these change over the course of a day and represent only initial daily forecasts. Click on this link for a full-sized map showing these hazards:

  • Winter storm watches, warnings and advisories – West Texas and southern New Mexico.
  • High wind watches, warnings and advisories – Southern California and the lowlands to the east of Puget Sound in Washington.
  • Flood watches, warnings and advisories – Counties in Arkansas, Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana.

For additional information on severe weather, go to the NOAA Storm Prediction Center at http://www.spc.noaa.gov/ .

In Memoriam

There were no NPS line of duty deaths on this date. Click here for a full list of on-duty deaths.

From The Morning Report Archives

Today’s incident from the Morning Report archives:

Yellowstone NP – On the night of February 6, 1989, a 48-year-old Montana man was snowmobiling on a park road with several friends when he collided with a bison and suffered a broken neck and head and chest injuries. CPR was begun by his friends and later continued by rangers, but was unsuccessful. When last seen, the bison was still walking around. The man’s friends said that they’d all been drinking heavily before the accident occurred.


Name: Bill Halainen, Editor


National Park Service | Department of the Interior | FirstGov