Yes it DOES snow in the Southwest. :)
The Southwest region of the U.S. generally receives the least snow compared to the West and Southeast regions. Areas such as parts of Arizona and New Mexico experience very mild winters with minimal snowfall. In contrast, the West can see significant snowfall in mountainous areas, while the Southeast may receive occasional snow but typically more than the Southwest.
0N 78W is on the southwest side of the peak of the Nevada Cayembe mountain near Cayembe, Ecuador. The Google Earth photo shows it right at the edge of the snow line.
It is guaranteed that it will snow somewhere. Whether or not you will get snow depends on where you live.
All of the snow in Antarctica -- is snow in Antarctica.
snow cat
no because the southwest is very close to the equator and the closer you are to the equator the warmer it is.
You would not get snow in the southwest of Ireland in October.
The Southwest region of the U.S. generally receives the least snow compared to the West and Southeast regions. Areas such as parts of Arizona and New Mexico experience very mild winters with minimal snowfall. In contrast, the West can see significant snowfall in mountainous areas, while the Southeast may receive occasional snow but typically more than the Southwest.
Seven dwarves of Snow White
New Mexico's Mountains
The region in the US that gets the least snow is the Southwest. This area, which includes states like Arizona and New Mexico, typically has a warm, dry climate with minimal snowfall, especially in its lower elevations. In contrast, the West, particularly in mountainous areas, receives significant snowfall, while the Southeast also experiences more winter weather compared to the Southwest.
Wild horses like the Mustangs of the American west and southwest states are accustomed to cold weather and snow. As fall turns to winter the herds move down to lower altitudes where there will be less snow and warmer temperatures than at higher elevations.
The Taso ski valley gets well over 100 inches of the white stuff per year
elephants, snakes, all sorts of bugs, pandas (maybe), camels, tigers, lions, snow leopard, leopards, etc
It has to do with the amount of snowfall expected. Generally speaking, slanted roofs shed moisture such as snow and rain much better than a flat or less steep roof. Steep roofs in the Southwest would be more for looks than necessity because of the unlikelihood of significant amounts of snow each year.
A southwest wind is coming from the southwest.
Weather in the southwest of the US comes inland from the Pacific Ocean. The large mountain ranges in California extract moisture from the atmosphere in the form of rain and snow, leaving very dry air to pass on to the southwest states, resulting in deserts there. The same happens in the State of Washington and Oregon . . . the weather comes in from the Pacific Ocean, and the Cascade Mountains extract rain and snow, leaving central Washington and central Oregon dry places. In Oregon, the result is referred to as the high desert. Agriculture occurs, though, by irrigating crops with water from the great Columbia River.