
Use the form below to access monthly reports.
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,
January was drier than normal across a significant portion of the western and Great Plains drought areas. The month was also dry from New England down much of the eastern seaboard. The primary stations in Alaska were predominantly dry, while those in Hawaii were predominantly wetter than normal. The rainfall pattern in Puerto Rico was mixed during the last 4 weeks to 8 weeks, with generally drier than normal conditions in the north and east.
January marked the fourth consecutive month with below-normal precipitation regionwide across the Southeast, where November 2003-January 2004 precipitation averaged less than 50 percent of normal in places and depleted soil moisture was indicated. This is in sharp contrast to the unusually wet conditions of the previous eight months. The unusual January dryness in the Northeast contrasts markedly with extreme wetness in 2003.
In spite of the November-December wetness, long-term moisture deficits (last 9 to 24 to 60 months) persisted across most of the West. Much of the Great Plains has suffered from moisture deficits in the 6-month time frame, while parts of the Plains and Upper Midwest have had significant moisture deficits back 12 to 24 months. In the central Plains, significant deficits even show up at 60 months.
Some regional highlights:
For questions on technical or scientific content of this report, please contact:
Richard Heim:For general climate monitoring questions, please contact:
CMB.Contact@noaa.govFor climate data orders, please contact the National Climatic Data Center's Climate Services and Monitoring Division:
NCDC.Orders@noaa.gov