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Multiple big rigs overturned Dec. 22, 2015, amid high winds in the Antelope Valley. (Credit: KTLA)
Multiple big rigs overturned Dec. 22, 2015, amid high winds in the Antelope Valley. (Credit: KTLA)

Multiple big rigs tipped over amid high winds in the Antelope Valley Tuesday, and all northbound lanes of State Route 14 were temporarily closed, according to CHP.

Possibly as many as seven trucks were toppled, California Highway Patrol Officer Michelle Bond said. She could not provide an exact number of vehicles affected.

The northbound 14 was closed at West Avenue D, between Lancaster and Rosamond, Bond said about 10:30 a.m. The duration of the closure was unknown, Caltrans District 7 stated on Twitter.

An overturned big rig is seen in lanes in the Mojave area on Dec. 22, 2015. (Credit: Brandon Vaccaro/California City Fire Rescue)
An overturned big rig is seen in lanes in the Mojave area on Dec. 22, 2015. (Credit: Brandon Vaccaro/California City Fire Rescue)

Around 11:45 a.m., the roadway was reopened to passenger vehicles but was shut down from Avenue D all the way to Lone Pine for high-profile vehicles, CHP’s Southern Division said on Twitter.

CHP’s traffic incident log indicated that the closure for high-profile vehicles indeed extended to Highway 395 in Lone Pine, nearly 140 miles north.

Winds were very heavy, Bond said, and a KTLA viewer reported a “bad wind storm” in the Mojave area, to the north of the initial roadway closure.

A KTLA viewer took this shot of an overturned vehicle in the Mojave area on Dec. 22, 2015. (Credit: Brittny Frye)
A KTLA viewer took this shot of an overturned vehicle in the Mojave area on Dec. 22, 2015. (Credit: Brittny Frye)

The National Weather Service issued a high-wind warning for the Antelope Valley and Los Angeles County mountains through noon Wednesday. Damaging gusts of up to 60 mph were likely, the weather service said.

The winds are capable of downing trees and power lines and can make driving “very dangerous,” especially for high-profile vehicles, the service warned.

Areas of blowing dust and sand could reduce visibility to nearly zero in the Antelope Valley.

Visibility was at a quarter-mile at about 11:30 a.m. in Lancaster, where gusts of up to 76 mph were recorded, the weather service said.