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National Climatic Data C 2008 Climate Highlights for the United States Compiled by Karin Gleason and Chris Fenimore Climate Monitoring Branch

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2008 Climate Highlights for the United States. Compiled by Karin Gleason and Chris Fenimore Climate Monitoring Branch. N ational C limatic D ata C enter. Overview Temperatures Precipitation Tornadoes Tropical Cyclones Midwest Flooding Drought. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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National Climatic Data Center

2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

Compiled by Karin Gleason and Chris Fenimore

Climate Monitoring Branch

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National Climatic Data Center

Overview• Temperatures

• Precipitation

• Tornadoes

• Tropical Cyclones

• Midwest Flooding

• Drought

2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

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National Climatic Data Center

Temperatures

2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

• The 2008 YTD (Jan-Oct) preliminary national average temperature was 55.93°F (43rd warmest on record – near the LTM).

• Most recent cooler YTD period occurred in 1996.

•For YTD period (Jan-Oct), only 2 states with much above average temperatures (New Jersey & Delaware).

• No large-scale heat outbreaks occurred on either a monthly or seasonal time scale during 2008.

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National Climatic Data Center

Temperatures – cont’d• For YTD period (Jan-Oct), Southeast Region average temperature was 65.3°F, which is equal to the long-term mean.

• On an annual basis, 2007 ranked 13th warmest across the Southeast Region with an average temperature of 64.1°F.

2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

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National Climatic Data Center2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

Precipitation• For YTD period (Jan-Oct), persistent wetness from the Great Plains to the Northeast.

• Wettest YTD period for Missouri and New Hampshire. Second wettest for Illinois and Massachusetts.

• The 2008 YTD (Jan-Oct) preliminary average national precipitation was 26.06 inches (26th wettest on record).

• California had its driest Spring and March-August periods on record.

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National Climatic Data Center2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

Precipitation – cont’d• Driest March-October period for West Region (CA & NV). Both 2007 and 2008 have been extremely dry.

• Nevada had driest March-September period on record.

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National Climatic Data Center2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

• 2nd largest January tornado outbreak on record with 54 confirmed tornado reports on the 7th & 8th.

Tornadoes

• February 5: The “Super Tuesday Outbreak” - 87 tornadoes occurred while 24 states held primary elections. - 57 deaths, the highest number of fatalities from a single outbreak since May 31, 1985 (76 deaths).

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National Climatic Data Center2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

•May was a very active month as 460 tornadoes were confirmed, making it the third most active May on record.

• June had two additional outbreaks causing 289 confirmed tornadoes.

Tornadoes – cont’d

• The high number of tornado-related fatalities during the first half of 2008 makes this one of the top ten deadliest January-October periods since reliable records began in 1953.

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National Climatic Data Center2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

Tropical Cyclones General Overview & U.S. Landfalling Tropical Cyclones

• Above average Atlantic TC Season: 16 named storms (avg. 11.0), 8 hurricanes (avg. 6.2), 5 major hurricanes (avg. 2.7).

• Below average Pacific TC Season: 17 named storms (avg. 15.3), 7 hurricanes (avg. 8.8), 2 major hurricanes (avg. 4.2).

U.S. Landfalling Atlantic Tropical Cyclones of 2008

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National Climatic Data Center2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

Tropical Cyclones – cont’dNorth Atlantic Basin

• Above normal activity: 4 storms formed before the start of August.

• 2nd most destructive season on record with up to $54 billion in damage (2008 USD) ($128 billion reported in 2005).

• 2008 is the only year on record in which a major hurricane existed in every month from July through November in the North Atlantic (Bertha, Gustav, Ike, Omar, and Paloma).

• Earliest known date for 3 storms to be active on the same day: Hurricane Bertha, and Tropical Storms Cristobal and Dolly (July 20).

• Tropical Storm Fay was the first tropical system on record to make landfall in one state four times.

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National Climatic Data Center2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

Tropical Cyclones – cont’dAtlantic Major Storms

(*Preliminary Statistics)

Storm Duration Intensity Damage Estimate

Bertha July 3 - July 20

120 mph956 mb

Ike September 1 - September 14

145 mph935 mb

$31.5 billion

Gustav August 25 - September 4

150 mph941 mb

$18 billion

Omar October 13 - October 18

135 mph959 mb

Paloma November 5 - November 10

145 mph943 mb

$1.4 billion

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National Climatic Data Center2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

Midwest Flooding• Successive rain events across the Midwest caused significant flooding across portions of IA, IL, MO, IN and WI.

• Record amounts of rainfall fell in the Upper Mississippi Basin in June setting 15 new all-time daily precipitation records.

• 170 stations reported precipitation totals for June which ranked within their top five records.

• 83 of Iowa's 99 counties were declared disaster areas by the state Governor.

• Storms and flooding across six states killed 24 people, injured 148 and caused more than $1.5 billion in estimated damage in Iowa alone.

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National Climatic Data Center2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

Midwest Flooding – cont’d

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National Climatic Data Center2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

Drought• Severe to extreme drought across contiguous U.S. at the end of Dec ‘07 was ~18% (down to ~14% by end of Oct ‘08) (PDSI).

• ~35% of contiguous U.S. was classified in moderate to exceptional drought (D1-D4, USDM) in January (down to ~21% by November).

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National Climatic Data Center2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

Drought – cont’d• Drought remained entrenched across parts of the Southeast throughout the year, although the spatial extent was lessened by the end of the year.

• California had its driest spring and March - August on record. The drought conditions fueled wildfires which made the 2008 fire season possibly the worst in California history.

• Severe drought present across portions of Texas in mid-2008 was mitigated by Hurricane Dolly, TS Edouard and Hurricane Ike.

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National Climatic Data Center2008 Climate Highlights for the United States

Drought – cont’d• Palmer Drought Index statistics for the contiguous U.S.:

• Peaked at 31% moderate-extreme drought in Jun-Jul 2008

• Peaked at 29% moderate-extreme wet spell in Dec 2008