Authors: | Eric D. Hunt, Jordan I. Christian, Jeffrey B. Basara, Lauren Lowman, Jason A. Otkin, Jesse Bell, Karla Jarecke, Ryann A. Wakefield, Robb M. Randall |
Volume: | Volume 2020, No. 4 |
DOI: | http://www.doi.org/10.46275/JOASC.2020.11.001 |
Abstract: | An exceptional flash drought during the spring and summer of 1936 led to extreme heat waves, large losses of human life and significant reductions of crop production. An analysis of historic precipitation and temperature records shows that the flash drought originated over the southeastern United States (U.S.) in April 1936. The flash drought then spread north and westward through the early summer of 1936 and possibly merged with a flash drought that had developed in the spring over the northern Plains. The timing of the flash drought was particularly ill-timed as most locations were at or entering their climatological peak for precipitation at the onset of flash drought, thus maximizing the deficits of precipitation. Thus, by early July most locations in the central and eastern U.S. were either in drought or rapidly cascading toward drought. The weeks that followed the 1st of July were some of the hottest on record in the U.S., with two major heat waves: first over the Midwest and eastern U.S. in the first half of July and then across the south-central U.S in the month of August. The combination of the flash drought and heat wave led to an agricultural disaster in the north central U.S. and one of the deadliest events in U.S. history. |
Link: | https://stateclimate.org/pdfs/journal-articles/2020_4-Hunt.pdf |
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