We
haven't heard so much about the drought lately - has it gone away?
U.S.
drought deepens in Plains states, wheat crop suffers
Hot
and dry conditions in parts of middle America deepened an ongoing
drought in many states over the last week, according to a climatology
report issued Thursday.
9
November, 2012
October
is typically the third-wettest month for Texas, but instead last
month was the ninth-driest October statewide since 1895, according to
the Drought Monitor report issued weekly by a consortium of state and
federal climatology experts.
Texas
and Oklahoma both recorded above-normal temperatures and little or no
rain. Kansas and Nebraska also saw drought expansion.
The
persistent drought was hindering growth of the new winter wheat crop
in those states, as soil moisture levels were too low to spur normal
plant development. Grazing for livestock was also poor as pastures
remained parched.
Roughly
59.48 percent of the contiguous United States was suffering from at
least "moderate" drought as of November 6, down from 60.16
percent a week earlier, according to Thursday's Drought Monitor, a
weekly compilation of data gathered by federal and academic
scientists.
But
the portion of the contiguous United States under "extreme"
or "exceptional" drought - the two most dire
classifications - ticked up to 19.36 percent from 19.04 percent.
In
the High Plains, which include Kansas, Nebraska and the Dakotas,
severe or worse drought levels covered 83.94 percent of the region,
up from 83.87 percent of the region a week earlier. An estimated
57.54 percent of the region was in extreme or worse drought, up from
57.02 percent a week earlier.
Climatologists
said many areas had not seen much if any rain for three weeks or more
and topsoil and subsoil moisture levels continued to drop. Surface
water supplies remained short as well.
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