Several atmospheric factors came together to produce the copious rainfall amounts we saw locally. These included a very moist atmosphere with precipitable water (PW - the amount of water in a column of air) values of over 2" (or nearly a "worst case" for this time of year), a southwesterly flow of about 45-50 mph into the lower levels of the region, blowing over a stationary outflow boundary positioned just to our south which helped generate lift and storm initiation, and finally unstable air just south of the boundary which also provided some lift (see below). Storms continuously developed just west of the metro and trained over the same areas for many hours.
Two-day storm total precipitation based on radar estimates, ending late Sunday afternoon |
Departure from normal precipitation for the past seven days. Note the swath of 4-10" departures across the metro and into east-central AR. |
At one point yesterday morning,Flash Flood Warnings were in effect from Little Rock to Arlington, then got extended east even further! |
Selected rainfall totals for this event:
June 29th rain totals
- Memphis Int'l Airport - 5.87"
- MemphisWeather.net in north Bartlett - 4.69" (est.)
- Agricenter in Cordova - 6.13"
June 28-29th rain totals
- Memphis Int'l Airport - 7.09"
- MemphisWeather.net in north Bartlett - 6.06"
- Agricenter in Cordova - 7.48"
- West Memphis, AR airport - 6.86"
- Collierville - 5.77"
- Germantown - 6.99"
- Somerville - 3.95"
- Olive Branch - 5.94"
- Pleasant Hill, MS - 5.66"
- Madison, AR - 10.80"
As far as records go, Memphis International Airport broke a daily record for rainfall on Sunday with 5.87". In addition, that total is the seventh highest daily rainfall amount in Memphis recorded history (dating to the 1870s)! The June total at Memphis will be 13.40", which makes this month the 2nd wettest June on record, trailing only June 1877 which recorded 18.16" of rain.
The Mississippi River gauge in downtown Memphis rose almost two feet between 3am and 3pm Sunday due to excessive flow from the area tributaries into the river. |
The Wolf River at Hollywood Street in Frayser climbed Saturday with storms in the area, then jumped more than 10 feet again Sunday and is receding much more slowly. |
The Nonconnah Creek near Memphis Int'l Airport rose about 22 feet Sunday, but had fallen back to pre-storm levels by 3am Monday. This gauge is very near the mobile home park that was flooded. |
Nonconnah Creek at Winchester Road rose 4 feet on Saturday afternoon then another 14 feet on Sunday morning, falling back to pre-storm levels by Monday morning. |
The Loosahatchie River in Frayser also rose about 15 feet Sunday and has dropped a few feet but remains very high on Monday. |
A similar situation on the Loosahatchie River at Brunswick Road, which is just below flood stage on Monday |
How were you impacted by the flooding on Sunday? You can find more pictures and video of the mobile home park flooding in the timelines on our social channels listed below.
Erik Proseus
MWN Meteorologist
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