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Ohio's drought continues to worsen week-by-week, with more and more of the state facing drought conditions, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. The U.S. Drought Monitor's map of Ohio for ...
A new drought map from the U.S. Drought Monitor shows extreme drought retreating from Franklin County and an increasing amount of the state's area experiencing no drought whatsoever. A map of Ohio ...
A map of Ohio's drought conditions. A large portion of southeastern and south-central Ohio is currently in an "extreme drought condition," according to the agency that monitors droughts.
Ohio is currently facing the most severe drought it's ever seen, and it continues to worsen, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. As much as 7% of the state is now experiencing "exceptional ...
The heat waves associated caused the deaths of seventeen people and overall damage from the Southeastern-state drought of 1993 was somewhere between $1 billion and $3 billion in damage (1993 U.S. dollars). [67] drought has caused over the United States damage amounting to an estimated $40 billion in 1998. [68]
Ohio's ongoing historic drought eased a little over the past week after remnants of Hurricane Helene swept over the state, according to a new map from the U.S. Drought Monitor.. A record-high of 1 ...
The 2012–2013 North American drought, an expansion of the 2010–2013 Southern United States drought, originated in the midst of a record-breaking heat wave.Low snowfall amounts in winter, coupled with the intense summer heat from La Niña, caused drought-like conditions to migrate northward from the southern United States, wreaking havoc on crops and water supply. [1]
The drought of 1988 ranked as the worst drought since the Dust Bowl, which had occurred more than 50 years earlier. Damages in the United States (as of 2008, adjusted for inflation) were calculated at between $80 billion and almost $120 billion. The state of Minnesota alone saw $1.2 billion in crop losses.