California's Drought Illustrated in One Shocking Image
By Sean Breslin
Published: Feb 27, 2014, 8:27 AM EST
weather.com
There is also a video shown here for which you need link
http://www.weather.com/news/science/sierra-snowpack-after-photos-20140226
There is also a video shown here for which you need link
http://www.weather.com/news/science/sierra-snowpack-after-photos-20140226
The first photo, taken on Jan. 18, 2013, shows a healthy California
snow pack. Exactly a year later, the second image, taken on Jan. 18,
2014, shows how awful California's drought is getting. (Images via NASA)
The first image, depicting a far snowier Sierra Nevada mountain region, was taken by NASA's Terra satellite on Jan. 18, 2013. Exactly a year later – and one day after California Gov. Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency, urging residents to conserve water – the second image was captured, with very little snow covering only the highest elevations of the Sierras.
"February has offered some relief," said weather.com senior meteorologist Jon Erdman. "Parts of the northern Sierra, particularly around Lake Tahoe, have been wetter than average in February."
(MORE: Here's How Much Rain and Snow California Could Receive)
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Good news is on the way as a more active pattern of storm systems will begin rushing into California this week and is expected continue through the weekend. Rain will fall on most of the state, while much-needed snow will reach the higher elevations.
While the precipitation will be welcomed by a parched state that desperately needs it to keep the water supply flowing through the summer months, serious concerns remain about a lingering drought that will require far more rain to kill. If the rain doesn't come in the next few weeks, it would have to fall in months that are traditionally dry.
Sobering...MT @NWSBayArea How much rain does #SF need by end of June to be average? About 0.14" every day thru 6/30....
— Jonathan Erdman (@wxjerdman) February 26, 2014
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