![]() Former areas of dryness and moderate drought in south-central Georgia, central South Carolina, and southeastern North Carolina were removed by Idalia’s rainfall. Heavy rainfall engendered by a surge of tropical moisture not directly associated with Idalia dropped moderate to isolated heavy rain on the western Florida Peninsula, the western Florida Panhandle, and scattered locales in and near Alabama. Hurricane Idalia brought a solid swath of heavy rain to the Southeast, but outside the band of heaviest rain, amounts dropped off quickly to the east and west of this band, so while dryness was vanquished in dry areas that were in the path of Idalia’s heavy rains, relief was not as widespread as might be expected due to the narrowness of the heavy rainfall band. ![]() Heavy rainfall from Hurricane Idalia remained south of this Region, and thus provided no relief in the areas of dryness from the mid-Atlantic northward. ![]() Dryness coverage also increased slightly in central New Jersey, where a small area of moderate drought (D1) developed. Drought coverage didn’t increase dramatically this week, but outside West Virginia, dryness and drought was mostly unchanged, though some areas of worsening were noted on the east side of the Appalachians and adjacent Piedmont areas of western Maryland and southern Pennsylvania. Elsewhere, moisture was again lacking over existing areas of dryness and drought. NortheastĪ recent trend toward increasing rainfall brought an end to abnormal dryness (D0) in central and western West Virginia. This is the greatest coverage at this time of year in more than 9 years, the prior record in that short interim being just over 50 percent in 2020. Department of Agriculture (USDA), the coverage of topsoils short or very short of moisture increased by 6 percent this past week, now covering 58 percent of the contiguous 48 states. Improvement was limited to the band of heavy precipitation from Hurricane Idalia, and in scattered locales affected by the tropical moisture surge in the Desert Southwest, from southeastern Utah to central Arizona westward toward central California. F accompanied deficient precipitation over a large area from the Rockies to the Appalachians and central Gulf Coast Region, prompting drought intensification over large parts of the Upper Mississippi Valley, the Central States, and the southern tier of the country west of the Florida Panhandle. Most of the Nation, however, endured a hot and drier-than-normal week, including most areas of drought. The heaviest amounts outside the lower Colorado River Basin fell on higher elevations and over areas where precipitation was enhanced by orography, as is typical. Heavy rainfall fell in a broken pattern over this general area, with the highest amounts reported across interior southeastern California, over much of the middle Colorado River Basin, and across scattered areas farther north. Between 4.5 to 10.0 inches of rain fell solidly along this swath of land, but rainfall totals dropped off rapidly to the west and east of the main band.įarther west, a surge of tropical moisture pushed northward into the southwestern U.S., continuing northward across the Great Basin, Intermountain West, and adjacent Rockies into adjacent Canada. A solid swath of heavy rains were observed in a band from the eastern Florida Panhandle northward through middle Georgia, interior eastern South Carolina, and southeastern North Carolina as far north as the lower Outer Banks. Idalia moved from the Gulf of Mexico inland along the northeastern Gulf Coast of Florida and continued northeastward through south-central and east-central Georgia, slightly inland from the South Carolina Coast, then across southeastern North Carolina before moving into the open waters of the northwestern Atlantic Ocean. Heavy rainfall associated with Hurricane Idalia brought damaging winds and flooding centered along its path.
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