NORTH CAROLINA — A long stretch of below-average rainfall across the Southeast may finally be shifting, as new forecast data suggests a wetter pattern could begin developing over the next two weeks.
Recent 120-day precipitation anomaly maps show much of the Southeast — including North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, and parts of Virginia — running significantly below normal on rainfall since late fall.
Large areas are shaded in red and dark pink, indicating deficits that have built steadily over the past four months.
The 120-Day Rainfall Picture: Southeast Running Dry
According to the 120-day anomaly data:…