A magnitude 4.5 earthquake has rattled southern Texas in the vicinity of San Antonio, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) reported. The quake struck at 9.26 p.m. on Wednesday, at a depth of about 2.3 miles beneath its epicenter on the surface, which lay roughly 12 miles east-northeast of Falls City.
San Antonio's best chance of rain will be between 4 a.m. and 9 a.m. After the rain moves out, much drier air will move into South Texas.
The hustle and bustle of the busy holiday season can sometimes get the best of us. Making us more susceptible to injury or illness. Which is why you need a pla
Dense fog advisory issued for Central and South Texas tonight through Wednesday. Visibility will drop to a quarter mile or less.
After a bitterly cold week, a major weather pattern change will bring warmer temperatures and some rain to South Texas next week.
The 4.5-magnitude earthquake — quite powerful compared to most that occur in Texas — happened at 9:26 p.m. on Wednesday, Jan. 29, the USGS says. It was detected about 12 miles east-northeast from the town of Falls City, which is roughly a 45-mile drive southeast from San Antonio.
The Alamo City officially recorded 0.10 of an inch of snow at the San Antonio International Airport, which makes Tuesday morning’s event the first measurable snowfall found since February 2021. Thankfully, this event was nothing compared to the multi-day deep freeze that we all remember nearly four years ago.
Salena Sanchez, a fourth-grade teacher with South San Antonio ISD, died last Tuesday after a battle with ovarian cancer at the age of 30.
Strong to severe storms are expected to develop across west-central Texas tonight, and they'll move eastward overnight and Thursday.
FAU never trailed Wednesday night and will look to make it back-to-back victories on Sunday when the Owls host in-state rival South Florida.
The magnitude-4.5 quake occurred at approximately 9:26 p.m. in far northern Karnes County, about 45 miles southeast of the Alamo City. As of 7:30 a.m. Thursday, over 650 people had reported feeling the quake, according to USGS.