Power Pacific system will continue to bring significant impacts for Pacific Northwest into northern California the remainder of the week. Dangerous coastal affects, heavy rain, flooding, strong winds, and higher elevation mountain snow continues. Meanwhile, a storm across the east is set to bring the first accumulating snow to many higher elevations of the Catskills into the central Appalachians. Read More >
Mountain snowpack and associated snow water equivalents (SWEs) across central through northwestern Wyoming were generally above to much above average by the middle of April; while SWEs across basins in southern Wyoming continued to be generally below average. SWEs at the peak snowmelt runoff elevations (8,500’ – 10.000’) were the highest across the Shoshone and Upper Yellowstone Basins at 140 to 180 percent of median. The Upper Bear and Little Snake Drainages had SWEs at 75 to near 85 percent of median at the peak snowmelt runoff elevations.
This outlook is based on various diverse hydrological factors such as snow water equivalents (SWEs) in the mountain snowpack, basin morphology (i.e. how basins respond to snowmelt runoff), antecedent soil moisture, biological factors (bark beetle kill/spruce blight), low elevation snow depths, and likely temperature and precipitation trends during late spring/early summer.
…High potential for flooding associated with snowmelt runoff is expected across extreme lower portions of the Big Wind River….
…Moderate to High potential for flooding associated with snowmelt runoff is forecasted over upper sections of the South Fork of the Shoshone River Watershed, headwater streams along the northeastern side of the upper Snake River Basin, and along headwater creeks and streams along the west side of the Big Horn Mountains…
…Moderate potential for snowmelt runoff flooding is forecasted across the middle to lower portions of the North/South Forks of the Shoshone River Basin, upper to middle sections of the Big Wind River Drainage, lower sections of the Upper Green River (La Barge), and along headwater streams along the east side of the Snake River Basin…
…All other of headwater basins across Wyoming can expect a generally Low potential for flooding due to springtime snowmelt runoff...
This is the Last outlook for this water year.
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Other hydrological information for Wyoming can be found at the NOAA hydrology website:
http://www.weather.gov/riw/local_hydrology
Monthly Wyoming Hydrologic Summary and Graphics:
(updated monthly around the 15th of every month)
http://www.weather.gov/media/riw/hydro/hydro_report.pdf
Wyoming Drought Information Page:
(updated at least once a month)
http://www.weather.gov/riw/drought
Wyoming Graphical Water Supply Outlook:
(updated by the 10th of every month—January-June)
http://www.weather.gov/images/riw/hydro/watersupply.png
Wyoming Average Precipitation by Basin:
(updated monthly)
http://www.weather.gov/images/riw/hydro/wyomingprecip.png
Wyoming Spring Snowmelt Runoff Flood Potential Graphic:
(updated around the 20th of the month---February-May)
http://www.weather.gov/images/riw/hydro/floodoutlook.png
Current and Forecast Wyoming Streamflows and/or River Stages:
http://water.weather.gov/ahps2/index.php?wfo=RIW
http://water.weather.gov/ahps2/index.php?wfo=CYS
http://waterdata.usgs.gov/wy/nwis/rt
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The current Wyoming Spring 2018 Snowmelt Runoff Flood Potential Outlook graphic: