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Weather in Utah
Utah
’s
four-season climate is healthy and invigorating. The state’s elevation ranges
from a low of 2,200 feet in southwestern
Washington
County
to more than 13,500 feet in the
northeastern
Uinta Mountains
. The average
maximum daytime temperature for
Utah
’s
metropolitan area ranges from 37 degrees in January to 93 degrees in July.
Low humidity and plentiful sunshine are two hallmarks of Utah’s climate. In Salt Lake
County, and many other
areas in the state, the summer daytime relative humidity averages less than 30
percent, and sunny skies prevail for an average of 237 days per year. The air
quality in the vicinity of Capitol
Reef National
Park is the best among the lower 48 states.
Annual precipitation varies from less than five inches in Utah’s arid Great
Salt Lake Desert
to more than 60 inches in the northern mountain ranges. In the state’s most
densely populated counties—Davis, Salt Lake, Utah
and Weber—precipitation averages six inches per year. Snow accumulates to
depths of 10 feet or more at some Wasatch
Mountain ski resorts; at
some locations, the season-long snow total will be 40 to 50 feet. The uniquely dry and powdery snow along the Wasatch Front
has earned Utah
the moniker “The Greatest Snow on Earth®.”- Utah Facts 2006

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