golden state earlier this year. now, emergency managers are tracking hilary, trying to anticipate where resources will be needed most. when the storm hits, some areas could see up to 10 inches of rain. las vegas usually gets a little more than 4 inches a rain in a year. if the storm continues on its path, it could get that amount in one weekend. the last tropical storm to hit southern california was back in 1939. it dumped more than 5 inches of rain in los angeles, flooding communities and watching away homes. 45 people died. it is a once-in-a-lifetime event. this really is an all-hands-on-deck effort. reporter: now, it s a beautiful sunny southern california day right now, but that is likely to change soon. this storm will bring high surf and high winds. with that could create treacherous ocean conditions as early as this weekend. lifeguards are also warning about the runoff from all of the rain. that will likely contaminate the water around the beaches here
entangled, so they ll bring it up as fast as possible, but you re limited by ocean conditions, and you re limited by the condition of the vehicle if it s entangled in something at the sea floor. considering that they ve likely already run out of oxygen supply, then they re going to need a couple more hours if they re able to locate this thing, rescue them and then over the next few hours bring that to the surface, hence the reason why it seems like there s so much pessimism surrounding a real rescue here. that s right. you re talking several hours still. can you talk to me a little bit about what goes into getting on board one of these things? and i ask this because i know there s been a lot of question per the company and how they prepared for a mission like this and how the actual vehicle was prepared as well and constructed. i also want to tell folks what we re looking at now. this is a virtual reality set that we had corrected here on set to give folks a real inside look as t
According to researchers from the University of Gothenburg, the cumulative emissions of this climate-warming gas from fjords are equal to all of the world's deep ocean regions combined.