2,237 first-hand accounts of flood events in Arkansas, ranked by impact. Each is a NOAA-written narrative of the moment.
To the south, Tropical Storm Cristobal ventured from the Yucatan Peninsula on the 5th to the Louisiana coast on the 7th. The system made landfall between the mouth of the Mississippi River and Grand Isle, LA at 410 pm CST on the 7th with maximum sustained winds around 50 mph.
Read the full account →By the 20th/21st, thunder was back again as a large storm system wobbled from the western United States into the middle of the country. The more active of the two days (including some severe weather) was the 21st. The focus was over southern and western sections of the state.
Read the full account →In addition to severe weather, there was torrential rain. More than four inches of precipitation dumped in spots. Twenty four hour totals through 600 am CST on the 11th included 5.00 inches at Batesville (Independence County), 4.30 inches at Bogg Springs (Polk County), 4.20…
Read the full account →In addition to severe weather, there was torrential rain. More than four inches of precipitation dumped in spots. Twenty four hour totals through 600 am CST on the 11th included 5.00 inches at Batesville (Independence County), 4.30 inches at Bogg Springs (Polk County), 4.20…
Read the full account →Stalled fronts from the north interacted with pieces of energy from the southwest, and this led to several rounds of heavy rain and severe weather from the 11th through the 14th. This led to some river flooding.
Read the full account →Stalled fronts from the north interacted with pieces of energy from the southwest, and this led to several rounds of heavy rain and severe weather from the 11th through the 14th. This led to some river flooding.
Read the full account →Stalled fronts from the north interacted with pieces of energy from the southwest, and this led to several rounds of heavy rain and severe weather from the 11th through the 14th. This led to some river flooding.
Read the full account →In addition to severe weather, there was torrential rain. More than four inches of precipitation dumped in spots. Twenty four hour totals through 600 am CST on the 11th included 5.00 inches at Batesville (Independence County), 4.30 inches at Bogg Springs (Polk County), 4.20…
Read the full account →In addition to severe weather, there was torrential rain. More than four inches of precipitation dumped in spots. Twenty four hour totals through 600 am CST on the 11th included 5.00 inches at Batesville (Independence County), 4.30 inches at Bogg Springs (Polk County), 4.20…
Read the full account →In addition to severe weather, there was torrential rain. More than four inches of precipitation dumped in spots. Twenty four hour totals through 600 am CST on the 11th included 5.00 inches at Batesville (Independence County), 4.30 inches at Bogg Springs (Polk County), 4.20…
Read the full account →In addition to severe weather, there was torrential rain. More than four inches of precipitation dumped in spots. Twenty four hour totals through 600 am CST on the 11th included 5.00 inches at Batesville (Independence County), 4.30 inches at Bogg Springs (Polk County), 4.20…
Read the full account →In addition to severe weather, there was torrential rain. More than four inches of precipitation dumped in spots. Twenty four hour totals through 600 am CST on the 11th included 5.00 inches at Batesville (Independence County), 4.30 inches at Bogg Springs (Polk County), 4.20…
Read the full account →In addition to severe weather, there was torrential rain. More than four inches of precipitation dumped in spots. Twenty four hour totals through 600 am CST on the 11th included 5.00 inches at Batesville (Independence County), 4.30 inches at Bogg Springs (Polk County), 4.20…
Read the full account →In addition to severe weather, there was torrential rain. More than four inches of precipitation dumped in spots. Twenty four hour totals through 600 am CST on the 11th included 5.00 inches at Batesville (Independence County), 4.30 inches at Bogg Springs (Polk County), 4.20…
Read the full account →Areas of showers remained persistent across much of the Ark-La-Tex through much of the day on February 11th, along the subtropical jet stream that extended over much of Texas and the Lower Mississippi Valley ahead of a strong upper level low pressure system just off the…
Read the full account →Tropical Storm Laura moved ashore from the Gulf of Mexico near Cameron, LA, around 1200 AM CST on August 27, 2020 with 150 mph sustained winds! This part of the state had never experienced such a powerful (Category 4) hurricane.
Read the full account →Tropical Storm Laura moved ashore from the Gulf of Mexico near Cameron, LA, around 1200 AM CST on August 27, 2020 with 150 mph sustained winds! This part of the state had never experienced such a powerful (Category 4) hurricane.
Read the full account →Tropical Storm Laura moved ashore from the Gulf of Mexico near Cameron, LA, around 1200 AM CST on August 27, 2020 with 150 mph sustained winds! This part of the state had never experienced such a powerful (Category 4) hurricane.
Read the full account →Tropical Storm Laura moved ashore from the Gulf of Mexico near Cameron, LA, around 1200 AM CST on August 27, 2020 with 150 mph sustained winds! This part of the state had never experienced such a powerful (Category 4) hurricane.
Read the full account →Tropical Storm Laura moved ashore from the Gulf of Mexico near Cameron, LA, around 1200 AM CST on August 27, 2020 with 150 mph sustained winds! This part of the state had never experienced such a powerful (Category 4) hurricane.
Read the full account →Tropical Storm Laura moved ashore from the Gulf of Mexico near Cameron, LA, around 1200 AM CST on August 27, 2020 with 150 mph sustained winds! This part of the state had never experienced such a powerful (Category 4) hurricane.
Read the full account →Tropical Storm Laura moved ashore from the Gulf of Mexico near Cameron, LA, around 1200 AM CST on August 27, 2020 with 150 mph sustained winds! This part of the state had never experienced such a powerful (Category 4) hurricane.
Read the full account →Tropical Storm Laura moved ashore from the Gulf of Mexico near Cameron, LA, around 1200 AM CST on August 27, 2020 with 150 mph sustained winds! This part of the state had never experienced such a powerful (Category 4) hurricane.
Read the full account →Tropical Storm Laura moved ashore from the Gulf of Mexico near Cameron, LA, around 1200 AM CST on August 27, 2020 with 150 mph sustained winds! This part of the state had never experienced such a powerful (Category 4) hurricane.
Read the full account →