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Researchers chase storms, study fist-sized stones in Alberta’s ‘Hailstorm Alley’

CALGARY - Julian Brimelow holds up a replica of the mother of all hailstones – a lumpy white blob as big as your fist carrying the weight of two baseballs with the power to pulverize fields of corn into green-yellow mush.

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Researchers chase storms, study fist-sized stones in Alberta's 'Hailstorm Alley'

Julian Brimelow, executive director of the Northern Hail Project, displays a 3D replica of a near record hailstone collected in 2022, at the Telus Spark Science Centre in Calgary, on Tuesday, July 22, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Bill Graveland


CALGARY - Julian Brimelow holds up a replica of the mother of all hailstones – a lumpy white blob as big as your fist carrying the weight of two baseballs with the power to pulverize fields of corn into green-yellow mush.

Brimelow and other researchers from Western University in London, Ont., are using it in their research to better understand and predict Alberta’s prevalent hailstorm activity and mitigate harm to people and property.

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