U.S.: Drought, Dust, Rain, Flooding

1. Drought

* U.S. Drought Monitor: Current conditions

http://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/archive.html

2. Dust

* Dust over the Four Corners Region [Earth Observatory;16 April 2013]

Dust plumes blew over parts of Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Utah on April 16, 2013. The dust plumes arose in two large clusters, one in northeastern Arizona, and the other in northwestern New Mexico. The dust plumes grew in both size and intensity through the day. The plumes blew toward the northeast, possibly stirring additional particles as they moved.

The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite captured the top image in the morning, and MODIS on NASA’s Aqua satellite captured the bottom image in the afternoon. Both images are natural color.

On April 16, the U.S. Drought Monitor reported that, with the exception of a small region in central Arizona, abnormally dry or drought conditions prevailed throughout Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Utah, with an area of extreme drought stretching across the Arizona-New Mexico border. Many of the dust plumes visible in these images arose in or near that area of extreme drought.

3. Rain/Flooding

* U.S. drought falls below 50 percent for first time in 10 months [Science Daily; 18 April 2013]

The area of the contiguous United States in moderate drought or worse fell below 50 percent for the first time since June 19, 2012, according to the latest edition of the U.S. Drought Monitor released Thursday.

Heavy precipitation across the Plains and the upper Midwest continued to ease drought. The area of the lower 48 states in moderate drought or worse declined to 47.82 percent, from 50.82 percent a week ago.

"We've been on a steady but slow recovery path from drought since the peak in September 2012," said Mark Svoboda, University of Nebraska-Lincoln climatologist and a founding author of the Monitor. "We've seen a much more active weather pattern lately across the midsection of the country, which has been eroding the intensity of drought as we head into spring. This is exactly what we needed."

Svoboda, the head of the Monitoring Program area at the National Drought Mitigation Center based at UNL, cautioned that improvement is still needed before the hot, dry season sets in.

Drought Monitor authors synthesize many drought indicators into a single map that identifies areas that are abnormally dry, in moderate drought, in severe drought, extreme drought and exceptional drought.

In the Midwest, heavy rains soaked into thawing soils and reduced drought in Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin and Missouri, observed this week's narrative accompanying the Drought Monitor map.

The area of the Midwest in moderate drought or worse declined to 20.94 percent from 32.24 percent the preceding week, according to statistics released with the map.

In the Plains, drought receded in eastern Oklahoma, eastern Kansas, extreme eastern Nebraska and the Nebraska Panhandle, and most of the Dakotas. An area of exceptional drought, the worst category of drought, was eliminated from South Dakota. Heavy rains also improved conditions in Georgia, South Carolina and Florida. But decent precipitation eluded Texas and Arizona, which were among the few areas where drought got worse.

The U.S. Drought Monitor map is jointly produced by the National Drought Mitigation Center at UNL, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and about 350 drought observers across the United States. The map is released each Thursday based on data through the previous Tuesday morning.

Statistics for the percent area in each category of drought are automatically added to the U.S. Drought Monitor website each week for the entire country and Puerto Rico, for the 48 contiguous states, for each climate region, and for individual states. Data is archived to January 2000.

* Rains wash away US drought [New Vision; 19 April 2013]

CHICAGO - Torrential downpours across a broad swath of the U.S. Midwest this week are easing the worst drought in more than 50 years, flooding streams, snarling river transportation, stalling corn plantings - and changing the outlook for the American farm economy in 2013.
The Army Corps of Engineers is closing locks along a 150-mile stretch of the Mississippi River from roughly Davenport in Iowa to Hannibal, Missouri. Barge traffic was backing up Thursday, as water levels were too high for barges to take on grain.
The Mississippi and other major rivers are expected to begin cresting Sunday - and likely will run over levies in some areas. That is a sharp reversal from as recently as January, when low water levels disrupted the main water thoroughfares that bring grain from the nation's breadbasket to the world's markets.
"These rains are really helping bring most areas out of drought status. And the rain encompasses all of the western Corn Belt that was previously dry," said Don Keeney, meteorologist for MDA Weather Services, a widely followed commercial forecasting firm.
If the drought is ending, it would represent a sea change for the farm economy, where expectations for another dry summer had been baked in. Continued rainy weather could further delay spring plantings, cause a sharp fall in the price of farm commodities, and lower the cost of everything from hog feed to cereal ingredients.
Lower feed prices would help livestock and dairy producers, but soft grain prices could cut into farmers' incomes and perhaps even cause farmland values to retreat from recent record highs.
An end to drought conditions would bring a burst in economic activity across the agriculture industry - from farmers in the fields to those operating grain elevators, processing companies and shippers.
"If in fact the drought is easing, and if we are migrating to a situation that might afford better yields, to my mind, for the full value chain, it's a godsend," said Bruce Scherr, chief executive of agribusiness analytics firm Informa Economics. "Another year like last year would be devastating."
The 2012 drought brought corn production to only 10.8 billion bushels, a six-year low, with yields reaching a 17-year low of 123.4 bushels per acre.

The production losses added to the impact of rising exports to China and domestic demand for ethanol production to drive corn prices on the Chicago Board of Trade to an all-time high last August.
Farmers filed a record $11.8 billion in crop-insurance claims, according to Agriculture Department data. And farm income fell last year by 3 percent from a record set in 2011.
Transformation
"Isn't it ironic that all winter we've been worried about dry soil, and all of that has changed in a period of four or five weeks," said Rich Feltes, vice president of research for Chicago commodities brokerage R.J. O'Brien.
Drought conditions persist in the southwest corner of the U.S. Plains where hard red winter wheat is a dominant crop. Southeast Colorado, southwest Kansas and the Panhandles of Texas and Oklahoma remain dry, Keeney said.

The western states of Kansas and Nebraska would need another 2 to 4 inches of rain to end the drought, he added.
In the western Great Plains, where some areas have experienced three years of dry conditions that have eliminated subsoil moisture, even a flurry of steady showers may not cause the drought to break.

"We just have very serious drought issues and we will not be able to eliminate them overall," said Dennis Todey, state climatologist with South Dakota State University, during a National Weather Service drought update call on Thursday.
For the rest of the Midwest, though, the drought may be ending.
Even before this week's rains, early spring showers had ended the drought in roughly the eastern two-thirds of the Midwest, Keeney said.
Since Saturday, more than 6 inches of rain has fallen in some areas, with much of the upper Midwest receiving at least 2 inches. Weather forecasters were predicting as many as 4 inches of rain in the next 24 hours.
Flooding
Heavy rains overnight Thursday caused flooding in some areas, closing roads and clogging river traffic. In downtown Chicago, at least one expressway closed Thursday morning due to standing water, and commuter rail lines were delayed by switching problems related to the heavy rainfall.
High water also hindered barge loading at riverside grain terminals, while swirling currents impacted movement. At Gulf of Mexico export terminals, prices for corn and soybeans jumped by 10 cents a bushel as shippers scrambled to fill ocean-going vessels before much Mississippi River traffic grinds to a halt.
"When the river gets to these levels, people might not have enough clearance to get a barge under the barge spout to start loading it," said Gerald Jenkins, general manager at Ursa Coop, which owns three river elevators. "If it's not an issue today, it will be within a day or two because the river is expected to go up at least another 5 or 6 feet."
Rising water on the Mississippi River was forecast to close seven river locks from Muscatine, Iowa to Saverton, Missouri beginning on Friday, effectively halting barge shipping until at least next week, after the river crests starting on Sunday.
As recently as February, low water levels on the Mississippi had forced the Army Corps of Engineers to dredge shipping channels between St. Louis and Memphis, Tennessee.
More flooding could come in the next day or so in Missouri, northern Illinois, southeast Iowa and west central Indiana, forecasters said.
The Red River Basin, between North Dakota and Minnesota, also was expected to overrun its banks in late April, which would bring floodwaters into the grain fields of Manitoba, Canada.
The wet weather has caused U.S. corn plantings to fall behind the typical pace for spring seeding, but agronomists said farmers still have plenty of time to plant corn. And those who cannot get corn in the ground by mid-June can turn to soybeans, another cash crop.
"It's certainly delayed, especially when compared to last year's early start, but it's not late yet," said Robert Nielson, agronomist for Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Monday said 2 percent of the U.S. corn crop had been planted. Last year, 16 percent of the crop had been planted, and over the last five years, an average of 7 percent of the corn crop had been planted by this date.
Nielson said Indiana farmers would plant corn through the month of May, even on into early June, before switching from corn plantings to soybeans. Farmers who wait that long would switch to hybrids that mature more quickly than common corn, he added.
Emerson Nafziger, agronomist for the University of Illinois, said any further delay in planting could affect crop yields. "Nobody is panicking yet, but it does put planting behind, and everyone knows that on average late planted corn doesn't yield as well," he said.
Gary Blumenthal, head of agricultural consultancy World Perspectives in Washington, said farmers who spent most of last summer desperate for rain are now concerned they won't get to plant their corn on time. "There's a lot of uncertainty, but it's just uncertainty," he said. "I'm not sure we are at the point where we have certain adverse impact. My goodness, it's only April 18."

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Comment by Kojima on April 24, 2013 at 2:23pm

Red Cross Responds to Flooding Across Midwest; Explosions and Calif... [Wall Street Journal; 22 April 2013]

WASHINGTON, April 22, 2013 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The American Red Cross is providing relief and support across the country to help people suffering after floods in the Midwest, explosions in Texas and Boston and a wildfire in California.

MIDWESTERN FLOODING The largest response is in the Midwest where people spent Sunday night in Red Cross shelters across several states as flood dangers continue.

EXPLOSIONS IN TEXAS AND BOSTON Red Cross disaster workers continue to assist those affected by the tragic explosions in West, Texas and Boston.

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRE About 200 households were evacuated for a wildfire Sunday in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains near the city of Monrovia. The Red Cross opened a shelter and provided water and snacks to first responders and those forced to leave their homes.

Comment by Tracie Crespo on April 23, 2013 at 1:45pm

http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/04/23/17874908-deadly-river-fl...

Deadly river floods set to continue through weekend

A road is submerged during flooding along the Mississippi River north of Clarksville, Missouri, on Sunday.

Rivers including the Mississippi and Illinois are expected to remain in “major flood stage” through this weekend, the National Weather Service warned on Tuesday.

A number of flood warnings were in place as ongoing rain and runoff from last week’s intense downpours continued to keep the water levels high in rivers across Illinois, Missouri, Iowa, Indiana and Michigan in particular, the NWS added.

“The larger rivers, such as the Mississippi and Illinois Rivers, will take longer to recede and will remain in major flood stage through this weekend,” the weather service said.

After heavy rains, waters across the Midwest are rising fast, with at least three people dead and more showers expected on Tuesday. NBC's John Yang reports.

“Do not drive through flowing water. Nearly half of all flood fatalities are vehicle related. As little as 6 inches of water may cause you to lose control of your vehicle. Two feet of water will carry most vehicles away,” it added in a flood warning for several rivers in Missouri.

There was also a risk of severe storms from the Ohio Valley to the lower Mississippi Valley, weather.com said on Tuesday, with “localized damaging winds and large hail.”

The floods have been blamed for at least five deaths since Thursday and have also forced evacuations, swamped homes and shut down bridges.

Barge traffic on the Mississippi was brought to a near standstill. On Sunday at least one sank and others ran aground or were half-submerged because of the floods.

Fargo homes are being demolished to make way for flood dikes as waters approach. KVLY's Jennifer Titus reports.

States of emergency have been declared in Missouri and Illinois.

The Associated Press described the fight against the floodwaters in different communities across the affected area:

Days after bused-in prison inmates worked shoulder to shoulder with the National Guard and local volunteers to build a makeshift floodwall of sand and gravel in Clarksville, Mo., about 70 miles north of St. Louis, the barrier showed signs of strain Monday.

Crews scrambled to patch trouble spots and build a second sandbag wall to catch any water weaseling through.

In Grafton, Ill., some 40 miles northeast of St. Louis, Mayor Tom Thompson said small community was holding its own against the Mississippi that by early Monday afternoon was 10 feet above flood stage.

Waters lapped against some downtown buildings, forcing shops such as Hawg Pit BBQ to clear out and detours to be put up around town — one key intersection was under 8 inches of water.

"If it gets another foot (higher), it's going to become another issue," Thompson said. Many businesses "are kinda watching and holding their breath. ... Some things are going to really be close to the wire."

Elsewhere, smaller rivers caused big problems. In Grand Rapids, Mich., the Grand River hit a record 21.85 feet, driving hundreds of people from their homes and flooding parts of downtown.

Comment by Kojima on April 22, 2013 at 5:24pm

* 'Weather whiplash' swamps Midwest [USA Today; 22 April 2013]

Flooding descends on the Midwest mere months after drought disrupted river traffic.

Only a few months after a historic dry spell disrupted barge traffic on the Mississippi River, deadly floods brought soggy havoc over the weekend across the upper Midwest, and more flooding is in store this week along many rivers.

"Torrential rain last week, concentrated in two days or less, has led to major flooding in parts of the Midwest," said AccuWeather meteorologist Alex Sosnowski. "In some areas, flooding will continue well through the upcoming week."

On Sunday the Coast Guard closed the Mississippi River at Vicksburg, Miss., after barges hit a railroad bridge there and about 30 barges broke free from the towboat Captain Buck Lay.

Nine towboats — six bound upriver and three heading downriver — with a total of 134 barges were waiting to get through Sunday evening, Petty Officer Ryan Tippets said. He said three barges carried grain and the rest held coal.

"I haven't heard any word on how much of that has gotten into the water. I'm not sure which ones sank," Tippetts said.

One barge sank in the traffic channel, Tippets said. Two others were partly submerged and pushed against the bank, a third was pushed up on a river dike and the rest had been collected, he said.

The National Weather Service said many tributaries of the Mississippi and Ohio rivers are forecast to reach, surpass or remain at major flood stage over the next several days.

Flooding has been blamed for three deaths so far: two in Indiana and one in Missouri. In all three cases, vehicles were swept off the road in flash floods. High water also could be responsible for two more deaths in Illinois.

States of emergency have been declared in Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Wisconsin and Missouri. Residents have been evacuated and roads and bridges have been closed in the affected areas.

More rain is expected across the region Tuesday into Wednesday, The Weather Channel reported.

AccuWeather meteorologist Evan Duffey said that rain will be less intense for most of the hard-hit areas, but there is still the risk of flooding in a few locations.

In Grand Rapids, Mich., Johnny Cartwright said Saturday that raging floodwaters were coming into his apartment's basement and parking garage "like the Titanic."

The rains that fell in a 24-hour period last week over northern Illinois are expected only once every 40 years, Weather Underground meteorologist Jeff Masters said.

Major flooding is expected along a 250-mile stretch of the Mississippi from Quincy, Ill., to Thebes, Ill., this week, Masters said.

Flood damage this month in Illinois, Michigan, and Missouri will likely run into hundreds of millions of dollars, he said.

The wild swing from record dry to record wet has been what Weather Channel meteorologist Michael Palmer calls an "incredible reversal of fortune."

Earlier this winter, record low levels on the Mississippi River disrupted barge traffic.

This sort of "weather whiplash" will become more common in the years ahead because of climate change, Masters said.

As of Sunday afternoon, more than 200 gauges were in flood stage along rivers in the upper Midwest, according to the weather service. This included 46 gauges registering "major" flooding.

The Mississippi River also remains in moderate to major flood stage across Missouri, AccuWeather said. The Mississippi at St. Louis is forecast to crest Thursday at "moderate" flood stage before falling.

In Illinois, record flooding has been been detected at about a dozen river gauges, the Weather Channel reported. Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn declared at least 44 counties disaster areas from flooding.

Record flooding has hit the Grand River in Grand Rapids, Mich. A crest of just under 23 feet was likely late Sunday into today, smashing the previous record of 19.6 feet set in 1985. If the river reaches 23 feet, major flooding of residential areas would occur.

* Grandville flooding update: City water system stressed, water penet... [mLIVE; 21 April 2013]

GRANDVILLE, MI — Flood waters have continued to rise in Grandville, but city officials say the situation has not changed significantly since severe flooding began to inundate city homes and businesses on Friday.

* Grand Rapids declares state of emergency amid Grand River flooding [Detroit Free Press; 22 April 2013]

Comment by Kojima on April 20, 2013 at 2:43am

ZetaTalk: Dragon's Claw written Mar 9, 2006

http://www.zetatalk.com/index/zeta267.htm

We have warned since the start of ZetaTalk in 1995 that solar flares would be used as one of the covers during the cover-up. Global warming is the other key cover, but since it does not account for increased earthquakes and volcanic activity, these signs pointing to the approach of Planet X have been and will be tossed into the solar flares bucket. It is emissions from the Sun causing the core of the Earth to roil, thus the plates to become restless and move about and the volcanoes to burp and ooze. That these Earth changes have never been ascribed before to solar emission is not deemed a show stopper for those orchestrating the cover-up, as they think of the common man as dim witted and easily led about. What the common man sees, beyond the rhetoric, is that the world about them is changing and the explanations seem nonsensical. Even a low IQ ditch digger can sense that the weather has gotten extreme, but he also sees the establishment offering only vague explanations while seeming not to care about the effect on the working family. The message is that whatever is going on, the establishment does not plan to help the common man. … 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

* Study: U.S. Midwest drought in 2012 not the result of climate chang... [UPI.com; 12 April 2013]

WASHINGTON, April 12 (UPI) -- Climate change was not the cause of the historic drought that plagued the U.S. Midwest last year, a federal government study indicates.

Although some have pointed the finger at climate change as being behind for the driest summer since records began to be kept more than 100 years go, a report released Thursday by the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration said that was not the case, CNN reported.

Rather, the drought was the result of "a sequence of unfortunate events" that occurred suddenly, the report said, adding the circumstances were so unusual the drought could not have been predicted.

Drought occurred in six Plains states between last May and August because moist Gulf of Mexico air "failed to stream northward in late spring," and summer storms were few and brought little rainfall, the NOAA report said.

"Neither ocean states nor human-induced climate change, factors that can provide long-lead predictability, appeared to play significant roles in causing severe rainfall deficits over the major corn producing regions of central Great Plains," the report said.

The drought in Wyoming, Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota and North Dakota was the worst since record keeping began in 1895, study leader Martin Hoerling, a NOAA meteorologist, said.

"The event was rare, and we estimated maybe a once in a couple of hundred years event," he said.

"But for as extreme as it was, it didn't have any strong indications for early warning."

* Last Year's U.S. Drought Wasn't Caused by Climate Change [MIT Technology Review; 12 April 2013]

Last summer, in response to an intense and prolonged drought in the U.S.—the worst, indeed, since 1895—we ran an interview with a climate scientist, Thomas Karl, director of the National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, North Carolina. He said that droughts in general will be exacerbated by climate change, while noting that it’s difficult to link any particular drought to greenhouse gases. “I suspect it will be really difficult to show how much these changing patterns contributed to the drought in the Midwest this year,” he said (see “Is Climate Change to Blame for the Current U.S. Drought?”).

Karl was right about the difficulty of linking a particular event to climate change. A new study from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration provides an assessment of last year’s drought, and concludes that “human-induced climate change” did not play a significant role. It attributes the drought to natural variations, including fewer than normal thunderstorms and a change in the movement of air that redirected moist air from the Gulf of Mexico away from the Midwest, things that can happen without global warming. The report also says that climate models did not predict the drought.

The report concluded that, specifically regarding the impact of global warming on precipitation in the Midwest, “the signal of climate change may be very small compared to the noise of the intrinsic year-to-year variability. Detectability of a global warming signal in the statistics of summertime Great Plains rainfall may thus be very difficult at this time.”

Until the earth warms a lot more than it has already, it’s going to continue to be difficult to read the effects of climate change in the weather. Weather is too variable. There will continue to be very cold weather that will boost the popularity of climate skeptics and very hot or volatile weather—like Hurricane Sandy—that will serve to make global warming seem more plausible. The decision about what to do, or not do, about climate change will ultimately depend on how much people believe climate models’ predictions of a markedly different world in the future that we’ll see only limited—and often ambiguous—evidence of in the present.

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