2,894 first-hand accounts of flood events in Missouri, ranked by impact. Each is a NOAA-written narrative of the moment.
A southward shift in the Westerlies forced a slow moving front to move southeastward into the Ozarks Region on the 8th. The front then stalled and interacted with several upper level disturbances to produce heavy rainfall and severe storms over the area through the early…
Read the full account →Storms developed during the afternoon and early evening as a very moist and unstable air mass interacted with upper level energy and an approaching cold front.
Read the full account →Storms developed during the afternoon and early evening as a very moist and unstable air mass interacted with upper level energy and an approaching cold front.
Read the full account →Storms developed during the afternoon and early evening as a very moist and unstable air mass interacted with upper level energy and an approaching cold front.
Read the full account →A cluster of showers and thunderstorms, extending from St. Louis metro area to southeastern Missouri, moved eastward through the afternoon and early evening hours.
Read the full account →A cluster of showers and thunderstorms, extending from St. Louis metro area to southeastern Missouri, moved eastward through the afternoon and early evening hours.
Read the full account →Storms developed during the afternoon and early evening as a very moist and unstable air mass interacted with upper level energy and an approaching cold front.
Read the full account →A southward shift in the Westerlies forced a slow moving front to move southeastward into the Ozarks Region on the 8th. The front then stalled and interacted with several upper level disturbances to produce heavy rainfall and severe storms over the area through the early…
Read the full account →A southward shift in the Westerlies forced a slow moving front to move southeastward into the Ozarks Region on the 8th. The front then stalled and interacted with several upper level disturbances to produce heavy rainfall and severe storms over the area through the early…
Read the full account →A cluster of showers and thunderstorms, extending from St. Louis metro area to southeastern Missouri, moved eastward through the afternoon and early evening hours.
Read the full account →Storms developed during the afternoon and early evening as a very moist and unstable air mass interacted with upper level energy and an approaching cold front.
Read the full account →Storms developed during the afternoon and early evening as a very moist and unstable air mass interacted with upper level energy and an approaching cold front.
Read the full account →Storms developed during the afternoon and early evening as a very moist and unstable air mass interacted with upper level energy and an approaching cold front.
Read the full account →Storms developed during the afternoon and early evening as a very moist and unstable air mass interacted with upper level energy and an approaching cold front.
Read the full account →A southward shift in the Westerlies forced a slow moving front to move southeastward into the Ozarks Region on the 8th. The front then stalled and interacted with several upper level disturbances to produce heavy rainfall and severe storms over the area through the early…
Read the full account →A southward shift in the Westerlies forced a slow moving front to move southeastward into the Ozarks Region on the 8th. The front then stalled and interacted with several upper level disturbances to produce heavy rainfall and severe storms over the area through the early…
Read the full account →Showers and thunderstorms developed ahead of a slow moving upper level disturbance that tracked eastward across the southern Plains into the lower and middle Mississippi Valley from the 2nd to the early morning of the 3rd.
Read the full account →Northwest and west-central Missouri were battered by three separate rounds of thunderstorms on June 27 and 28. The first cluster of storms moved through on the morning of the 27th, producing isolated incidents of wind damage.
Read the full account →Numerous roads were flooded in most counties of southeast Missouri. At least 20 county roads were closed in Stoddard County. County Road 18 was washed out in Ripley County, and other road washouts were reported in Scott and Mississippi Counties.
Read the full account →A heavy rainfall event developed the morning of March 19th, and continued through the overnight hours of March 20th. Bands of rainfall produced between two and four inches over portions of south central Missouri during an 18 to 24 hour period.
Read the full account →The flash flooding event on the 7th and early 8th, became a major flooding event across all of southern and central Missouri through the early afternoon of May 9th.
Read the full account →The flash flooding event on the 7th and early 8th, became a major flooding event across all of southern and central Missouri through the early afternoon of May 9th.
Read the full account →The flash flooding event on the 7th and early 8th, became a major flooding event across all of southern and central Missouri through the early afternoon of May 9th.
Read the full account →The flash flooding event on the 7th and early 8th, became a major flooding event across all of southern and central Missouri through the early afternoon of May 9th.
Read the full account →