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Please Note: The data presented in this drought report are preliminary. Ranks, anomalies, and percent areas may change as more complete data are received and processed.
On the national scale,
April was dry across much of the Far West, from the northern Rockies across the Great Plains to the southern Great Lakes, and in the Southeast. Above-normal precipitation across the southern and central Rockies and adjoining Plains states brought short-term drought relief to those areas. Much of Alaska was drier than normal, but wetter than normal conditions prevailed at the primary stations along the southern coastal band and the southern interior regions. The rainfall pattern in Hawaii was mixed. The primary stations in Puerto Rico were generally drier than normal, especially for the last 4 weeks, but the pattern was mixed at 8 weeks.
Wet conditions during April in the Northeast and Southwest brought relief from recent (and long-term) dry spells in those areas. This month marked the second and third consecutive dry months, respectively, for the West and Northwest regions. April 2004 ranked as the 22nd and 25th driest April, respectively, in the 110-year record for the West North Central and East North Central regions. Six of the last seven months have averaged near to much drier than normal for the Southeast. This recent dryness, combined with the prolonged dryness that occurred from 1998-2002, has resulted in the reappearance in the Southeast of an area of drought based on the Palmer Drought Index (February, March, April).
This month's short-term dryness compounded the long-term moisture deficits (last 9 to 24 to 36 to 60 months) in many areas.
Some regional highlights:
For questions on technical or scientific content of this report, please contact:
Richard Heim:For general climate monitoring questions, please contact:
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NCDC.Orders@noaa.gov