

With soils already saturated, the torrential rain from the latest atmospheric river posed an even higher risk for flooding and mudslides.įlooding along Washington’s Nooksack River is visible in this natural-color image, acquired on November 16, 2021, by the European Space Agency’s Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission.

Parts of the Pacific Northwest have endured an extraordinarily wet autumn, inching toward the seasonal record. The rainstorm was the latest in a parade of storm systems that have walloped the Pacific Northwest in recent months. Almost 2 more inches fell the following day, breaking the city’s two-day rainfall record. The airport in Bellingham, Washington, reported 7 centimeters (2.8 inches), the fifth-wettest day on record. Vancouver measured 5.3 centimeters (2 inches) that day. On November 14, the airport gauge in Hope, British Columbia, collected 17.4 centimeters (6.8 inches) of rain. Local rainfall amounts can be significantly higher when measured from the ground. The data are remotely sensed estimates that come from the Integrated Multi-Satellite Retrievals for GPM (IMERG), a product of the Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) satellite mission. The darkest reds reflect the highest rainfall amounts, with some places receiving as much as 10 centimeters (4 inches) or more during this period (the top of our scale). The map above depicts a satellite-based estimate of rainfall over the 24-hour period on November 14-a day that broke numerous records. Much of the rain fell from November 13-15, 2021, the product of a potent atmospheric river that took aim at the region and added more moisture to already saturated soils.

Torrential rain in the Pacific Northwest spurred deadly floods and mudslides that have damaged infrastructure and isolated communities in Canada and the United States.
