Many updates this week! -Finished restoring the February weather page, found here: February Weather -Added about a dozen new before and after photos for historic buildings on the Franklinton historic building database page. -Also added another dozen or so photos to the Downtown historic building database page. The focus of both Downtown and Franklinton has been along Broad Street. -Reconstructed large sections of the Census Tract Maps page that detail population, demographics and other data for Census tracts within Franklin County. -Restored some data for the Annual Weather Records page. -Added a Contact Page for any inquiries about the city or specific information. -A few other odds and ends updates.
If it seems like the last few years have been particularly wet, you’d be right. Columbus, other Ohio cities and many areas in the Midwest have been seeing record rainfall of late. Yesterday alone, June 19th, Columbus had a daily record 2.65″ of rain, flooding many streets across Franklin County, including I-71 in at least 2 places. Is it indicative of a fluke pattern or a local result of climate change? Let’s look at the numbers and trends more closely.
First of all, let’s look at the 20 wettest years on record through June 19th. 1. 1882: 32.50″ 2. 1890: 30.12″ 3. 2019: 27.08″ 4. 1964: 25.78″ 5. 2011: 25.68″ 6. 1893: 25.50″ 7. 2004: 25.49″ 8. 1996: 24.94″ 9. 1949: 24.52″ 10. 1945: 24.49″ 11. 1913: 24.45″ 12. 1883: 24.18″ 13. 2018: 23.98″ 14. 2008: 23.62″ 15. 1950: 23.60″ 16. 1990: 23.56″ 17. 1981: 23.49″ 18. 1898: 22.94″ 19. 1927: 22.92″ 20. 1937: 22.69″
So far, 2019 has had the 3rd highest rain total to date since 1879.
4 years this decade have been among the top 20 wettest years since 1879. Only the 1880’s can match that record, though both the 2000s and 2010s have been wetter, as shown below.
Ironically, few individual months in recent years have featured record precipitation. In the last 10 years, only 1 month- July 2017- appears in the top 25 wettest months. It’s just been more of a constant wet pattern, where most months now have above to well-above normal precipitation. While climate change can’t account for individual events or specific record rainfalls, the patterns are obvious enough to show that the climate in Columbus and in many other parts of the country is changing over time. This means that we should come to expect more of this in the years to come.