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NCDC / Climate Mon. / Climate-2004 / August / U.S. Drought / Regional / Search / Help
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Climate of 2004 - August U.S. Regional Drought Watch National Climatic Data Center, 15 September 2004
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Global Analysis /
Global Hazards /
United States /
U.S. Drought /
National Drought Overview /
Extremes
Use these links to access detailed analyses of Global and U.S. data.
Regional Drought Overview /
Additional Contacts /
Questions
Regional Overview
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August was dry across parts of the northern Rockies to Southwest, central Great Plains to northern Great Lakes, much of Alaska, and parts of southern Louisiana and the central Appalachians.
The Alaska dryness was apparent in both station precipitation reports and satellite-based wetness observations as well as monthly averaged streamflow, and was accompanied by unusually warm temperatures (station reports, satellite).
The precipitation pattern at the primary stations in Hawaii was mixed.
In Puerto Rico, below-normal precipitation was observed at the primary stations as well as the Cooperative stations for both the 4 weeks and 8 weeks ending on August 27 (4 weeks, 8 weeks) and September 3 (4 weeks, 8 weeks).
August rains brought short-term relief to the drought in the Pacific Northwest. But long-term moisture deficits (last 9 to 24 to 36 to 60 months) continued in many areas.
Dry conditions have persisted for much of the last 12 months across most of the West North Central, Southwest, and West regions:
- West North Central - 26th driest August, 21st driest September-August, 18th driest June-August
- Southwest - 32nd driest August, 39th driest September-August, 13th driest May-August
- West - 31st driest September-August, 3rd driest March-August
For the Southeast region, even though mid-2002 to mid-2003
had record wet conditions, the unusual dryness before and after that period was so severe that the region shows up as dry at the 48-month (4-year) to 60-month (5-year) time scales.
Some regional highlights:
- Several states had the tenth driest, or drier, month or season for:
- Soil moisture conditions:
- According to end-of-August USDA reports, more than 30 percent of the pasture and range land was in poor or very poor condition (higher than seasonal norms) in several northern Plains and western states.
- Several large wildfires burned during the month in the western U.S. and east central Alaska (wildfire loop).
- Much of the western U.S. has experienced dry conditions for the last five to six years. Continued dryness this month has exacerbated drought conditions across parts of the West.
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These overall conditions are evident in the following indicators:
A detailed review of drought conditions is available for the following regions and states:
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Additional Contacts:
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For all climate questions other than questions concerning this report, please contact the National Climatic Data Center's Climate Services Division:
Climate Services Division NOAA/National Climatic Data Center 151 Patton Avenue Asheville, NC 28801-5001 fax: 828-271-4876 phone: 828-271-4800 email: ncdc.info@noaa.gov
For further information on the historical climate perspective presented in this report, contact:
Richard Heim NOAA/National Climatic Data Center 151 Patton Avenue Asheville, NC 28801-5001 fax: 828-271-4328 email: Richard.Heim@noaa.gov
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NCDC / Climate Mon. / Climate-2004 / August / U.S. Drought / Regional / Search / Help
http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/research/2004/aug/drought-regional-overview.html
Downloaded Wednesday, 09-Jul-2008 03:53:03 EDT
Last Updated Tuesday, 29-Nov-2005 14:04:26 EST by Richard.Heim@noaa.gov
Please see the NCDC Contact Page if you have questions or comments.
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