129.4 inches of snow has fallen during this current winter season as of March 17t, 2012. The record for a season is 132.6 inches.
Not yet, it is about 4 to 6 weeks away.
Only 6.8" as of January 13, most of which fell yesterday. Normal for this point in the winter is almost 15".
Snow does not fall in tropical rainforests, though there are such things as mid-latitude rainforests (for example on the southeast coast of Alaska) where some snow will fall in the winter.
what tells u how much rain has fallen is you would use a rain gauge to track down the rain water from the precipitation
Alaska's climate varies immensely, from the cool and super-humid southeast to the brutally cold and dry Arctic Coast.Total precipitation over Alaska is typically around 3,000 millimetres (120 inches) in the southeast, around 300 to 400 millimetres (12 to 16 inches) in the Interior and West, and around 100 millimetres (4 inches) on the North Slope.In the high southeastern mountains, as much as 150 metres (5,905 inches) of snow may fall per year, which is equivalent to 11,000 millimetres of rain (though on Mount Logan it never gets warmer than -20˚C or -4˚F and is mostly around -40˚C or -40˚F).Actual rainfall (liquid precipitation) over Alaska varies from around 40 millimetres (1.5 inches) over the North Slope, to between 200 and 300 millimetres (8 to 12 inches) over the interior and West. In the warmer southern coast rainfall varies from around 12 inches over the rain shadow areas near Anchorage to around 3,000 millimetres at Yakutat and 3,800 millimetres at Ketchikan where it can be too mild for snow even in winter.
Today is 2/20/13 and 10 cm has fallen today, making a total of 226.4 cm that fell this year so far.
Greyhound does not run to Alaska. You will have to fly, drive, hitchhike or take the ferry from Seattle
426" as of March 15, 2012. This is about 150% of usual.
it depends on the car
Depends on where in alaska you are. Average in Anchorage I would say is 65-70 degrees Fahrenheit in the summer but the lack of wind makes it feel like an 80 in a normal place with maybe 5-10 mph wind. It may get up to 90-98 degrees on a hot day in anchorage once a year. In fairbanks and interior Alaska howevee the temperature is much less moderate. In the summer it can get well over 100 but I'm not sure of an average. In the winter it will drop much further than anchorage as well. Anchorage bottoming at -30 and fairbanks still getting lower past -40.
Anchorage is much closer to that longitude than Sydney is.
It really depends where you are moving from. Moving to Anchorage from Fairbanks will certainly be cheaper then from New York City.
When I lived in Fairbanks we called it Los Anchorage because of it being so much warmer and milder than the northern regions of Alaska.
As of today (April 10, 2012) it is $4.22 to $4.38 depending on where you get it.
Rainfall depends on what part of Alaska you live in.
nothing
The Great Alaska Earthquake of 1964 which is also known as the Good Friday Earthquake.
There are many dangers in Alaska, but mostly outside the population centers. Anchorage is considerably less dangerous than much of Southern California. However there are many sightings of moose in downtown Anchorage, and bears and wolves live all over the state.