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State of the Climate
Drought
September 2004

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

National Climatic Data Center


Use the form below to access monthly reports.

« August 2004
Drought Report
October 2004 »
Drought Report


U.S. Drought Highlights:

Map showing Palmer Z Index
Palmer Z Index

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.


National Overview

On the national scale,


Regional Overview

Record rains in the eastern U.S. from three tropical systems inundated the remnant drought areas of the Southeast. Heavy rains also fell from the northern Plains to parts of the Southwest, bringing short-term relief to some of the drought areas of the central Plains and Southwest

In between these two September wet bands was a large swath of very dry conditions which stretched from the Great Lakes to the Lower Mississippi Valley and southern Plains. The southwestern quarter of the country and parts of the northern Rockies and High Plains were also dry.

The precipitation pattern at the primary stations in Alaska and Hawaii was mixed, although most Alaska stations were wetter than normal. September was generally wet to near normal in Puerto Rico, based on both the primary station precipitation reports and on streamflow.

Map showing Current Month Palmer Hydrological Drought Index
Palmer Hydrological Drought Index

Long-term moisture deficits (last 6 to 24 to 60 months) persisted across parts of the mid-Mississippi Valley, central Great Plains, and northern High Plains, and most of the West. In spite of the record heavy tropical rainfall during September, the Southeast over the last 5 years was so dry that slight deficits still appear on the 48-month and 60-month precipitation anomaly maps.

Some regional highlights:


Questions?

For questions on technical or scientific content of this report, please contact:

Richard Heim:
Richard.Heim@noaa.gov

For general climate monitoring questions, please contact:

CMB.Contact@noaa.gov

For climate data orders, please contact the National Climatic Data Center's Climate Services and Monitoring Division:

NCDC.Orders@noaa.gov

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