April 25, 2024
Sierra snowpack dwindles, water content drying up
SACRAMENTO - California's snowpack is at historically low levels, a casualty of the state's wimpy winter and ongoing drought.

In Northern California, the Sierra Nevada snowpack's water content is at its lowest late-March level since records began in 1950, at just 6% of the historical late-March average, the California Department of Water Resources said.

The snow's water content is a key measurement for water resource managers, since it measures the amount that will trickle into the state's reservoirs once it melts later in the spring.

More than 98% of the state of California remains in some level of drought, according to the most recent U.S. Drought Monitor, a website that tracks drought across the country. The drought has been exacerbated by the state's warmest winter on record. (Source: USA Today)
Story Date: April 6, 2015
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