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'Click' for More Info: Inter-County Title Company Located in Mariposa, California

noaa 20211024 westcoaststorm
A view from NOAA’s GOES-17 satellite of a “bomb cyclone” approaching the Pacific Northwest of the United States on October 24, 2021. This powerful storm set a record-low pressure reading for this part of the Pacific Ocean. 
(NOAA Satellites)
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November 9, 2021 - October 2021 was an unusually balmy month for the contiguous U.S., as several states recorded their warmest October on record.

Abundant Pacific moisture also dumped excessive rainfall over the western U.S. that created hazardous flood conditions in some places but helped snuff out some wildfire activity in the West. 

Here are more highlights from NOAA’s latest monthly U.S. climate report:

Climate by the numbers

October 2021

The average October temperature across the contiguous U.S. was 57.0 degrees F, 2.9 degrees above the 20th-century average, making it the sixth-warmest October in 127 years.

Several states ranked even higher on record for heat. Maryland and Ohio had their warmest October on record, while Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island each saw their second-warmest October.

The average precipitation was 3.11 inches — 0.95 of an inch above average — making it the ninth-wettest October. 

Above-average precipitation was observed across parts of the West, Plains, Great Lakes, Midwest, Southeast and Northeast. California and Illinois both saw their fourth-wettest October on record.

Year to date (YTD) | January through October 2021

The average U.S. temperature for the YTD was 57.0 degrees F, 2.0 degrees above the 20th-century average, making it the ninth-warmest such period in the climate record.

Maine saw its second-warmest YTD on record, while New Hampshire and Vermont had their third warmest. In contrast, temperatures this year so far ran below average across parts of the Deep South.

The U.S. precipitation total for the YTD was 26.74 inches — 1.38 inches above average — which placed in the wettest third of the record. Massachusetts and Mississippi had a third-wettest YTD, while Louisiana saw its fourth wettest. 

Precipitation was below average across portions of the West, northern Plains, Great Lakes and New England. Montana saw its fourth-driest YTD on record. 

U.S map plotted with significant climate and weather events that occurred during October 2021.
A map of the United States plotted with significant climate events that occurred during October 2021. Please see the story below as well as the full climate report highlights at http://bit.ly/USClimate202110. (NOAA NCEI)

Other notable climate events in October

  • Pacific Northwest smacked by record bomb cyclone: An all-time record low pressure system for the region developed in the eastern Pacific and strengthened rapidly on October 24, generating hurricane force winds and wave heights up to 45 feet off the coast of Washington and Oregon. Wind gusts toppled trees and knocked out power around the Seattle metro area and Puget Sound.
  • Atmospheric river deluged the West Coast: Conveyor belts of Pacific moisture, known as atmospheric rivers, impacted much of the central West Coast from October 19-26. On October 24, a Category 5 (exceptional) atmospheric river event brought record rainfall to portions of central California. Sacramento, Blue Canyon and Santa Rosa each reported their wettest 24-hour period on record. The heavy rain near wildfire burn scars triggered multiple landslides, but helped to partially quench the wildfire season and drought severity across parts of the West.
  • Tornadoes touched down: Preliminary tornado counts across the U.S. during October were the second most on record for the month with a count of 146. Only preliminary counts in 2018 ranked higher with 159 tornadoes reported. Oklahoma reported a record 31 tornadoes for October, which exceeds the previous record of 27 set in 1998.

More > Access NOAA’s October climate report and download the images.
Source: NOAA