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Summer 2010
-- one of the warmest and wettest on record
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[September 05, 2010]
CHAMPAIGN
-- This summer was one of the warmest and
wettest on record, based on preliminary
data. The statewide average temperature for
summer (June-August) in Illinois was 76.4
degrees, 2.7 degrees above normal and the
seventh-warmest summer on record, according
to Jim Angel, state climatologist, of the
Illinois State Water Survey |
The
average rainfall for summer in Illinois was
16.7 inches, 5.2 inches above normal,
ranking as the sixth-wettest summer on
record. Statewide records extend back to
1895.
The heaviest rains occurred in western
and northern Illinois. Bentley, in Hancock
County, reported the most rain of any
location with 28.5 inches. Nine other sites
reported over 2 feet of rain within this
time frame.
The wettest summer on record was 1993
with 18.3 inches. The warmest summer on
record was 1936 with an average of 78.6
degrees.
The average statewide temperature for
August was 76.8 degrees, 3.2 degrees above
normal. That places the month as the
13th-warmest August on record. August was on
track to being even warmer, but a late-month
cool spell knocked it down a few notches in
the ranking.
August rainfall was close to normal, with
a statewide average of 3.4 inches, just 0.3
inches below normal. However, significant
areas in east-central and southern Illinois
received less than half that amount. For
example, Champaign reported 1.64 inches for
the month.
The National Weather Service calls for an
increased chance of warmer-than-normal
temperatures for Illinois in September. The
precipitation outlook for September is
neutral, with equal chances of above-,
below- and near-normal rainfall, except for
far northern Illinois, which has a slightly
higher chance of above-normal rainfall.
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The
Illinois State Water Survey at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
a division of the Institute of Natural
Resource Sustainability, is the primary
agency in Illinois concerned with water and
atmospheric resources.
[Text from
file received from the
Illinois State Water Survey]
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