AUGUST 1933 MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW 223 Year 1909 ......................................... 1910 ......................................... 1911 ......................................... 1912 ......................................... 1913 ......................................... 191 4 ......................................... 1915 ......................................... 1916 ......................................... 1917 ......................................... I918 ......................................... 1918.. ....................................... 1g20 ......................................... 1921 ......................................... 1833 ......................................... 1923 ......................................... 1924.. ....................................... 1Y25 ......................................... 193 6 ......................................... 1927 ......................................... 19. ......................................... 1929 ......................................... 1930 ......................................... 1931 ......................................... 1932. ........................................ TABLE 1.-Years of deficient rainfall (percent of normal) i n order of relative dryness, Island of Puerto Rico, 1899 to 193.2 North Pereeni 108 101 Io6 89 90 93 I17 122 104 67 9s 90 90 91 82 1M 8.i E9 13' 10: 88 76 127 108 - TABLE 3.-Percentage rainfall departure roin normal b y sections: Piierto Rico, 1899-1992- d ontinued Perccnt 125 98 107 96 96 94 55 131 89 82 - [sland Pereen, 1.18 74 113 1?4 94 91 90 134 81 93 __ West %cen lo( 91 103 114 93 106 $9 97 97 99 89 92 101 106 88 88 106 99 114 1 3 92 87 111 110 - - - 19?5 19% 1Y30 1021 1807 84 1907 E5 1818 R7 i8 1915 85 1930 85 73 1910 74 1923 75 88 1915 h9 1915 69 85 1939 85 192.5 88 89 96 99 95 72 110 88 78 117 109 - ion 1M 57 72 75 111 80 65 104 132 105 85 121 - 143 2 72 143 124 North ........... East.. .......... West ............ Islnnd .......... south ........... pp_______--___ 73 5 1901 134 192: IR? 1931 127 1916 I?? 1915 117 75.2 1931 143 1901 137 1909 125 1916 131 1932 121 7fi 9 1928 1% 1901 I ?i 1927 114 1912 114 1931 111 67 1 I le01 131 1931 1% 1916 121 192: 120 1902 118 42 o le09 198 1531 143 ign? 13s 1916 1x1 imn 133 Per- cenl 131 18 66 E7 175 145 81 94 155 103 84 104 108 Inchel 4.62 1.44 3.40 6.89 10.02 10.65 11.13 9.17 9.58 9.63 7.82 6.46 80.81 hchcs 4.28 .71 2.44 4.30 11.96 7.58 6.07 7.96 11.28 7.21 6.11 4.83 74.71 Per- cent 121 24 72' 97 188 134 02 117 149 94 85 108 112 Year - 18. ......................................... 19 oo...... ................................... 1901 ......................................... 19oa ......................................... 1903 ......................................... 1804 ......................................... 1 ~5 ......................................... 1806....... .................................. 1807.......... ............................... 1908. ........................................ North Percent 110 101 134 115 94 93 94 96 85 93 - 138 107 109 109 97 80 96 106 103 109 93 98 94 93 East South -- - Percent 116 95 107 loa 91 89 lo? 121 07 51 97 (14 92 Sn SO 105 R9 80 130 I14 88 79 123 112 - hTorth .......... 73. 5 1930 76 1923 83 South.. ........ 1 42.0 1929 I !$ 1 ;;;; 1 72 Island: _______ __. 67.4 1930 79 1933 YO East ........... i5.28 1923 I907 7.1 West ............ 76.9 1930 ss section 1 Mean r l ~ Per- Year ::; Pear cent I- 1-1-1--1- 19?6 89 1913 90 igzn yo 1 9 3 92 ign5 93 I Y ~O 92 1918 O? 1914 Y4 1Y11S 94 1917 81 1921 6 i lY2R SS 1913 91 1921 92 1 9 3 94 North East west I I I 1 I Note: Old Spanish records, Ean Juan, dating from 1868 show a dry period, approxi- matin? the record for 65 years in 1Yi3, annual rainfall 68 percent of the normal and in 1893 67 percent of normal. Cnnoranas record lS9fl-98 also hm record dry penod. 1693 68 per- cent. TABLE 4.-Percentage of the average precipitation i n the S years of deficient and the S years o f greatest precipitation in the groups of States, no. 1 to 4 , and in Puerto Rico TABLE 2.-Years of greater than normal rainfall (percent of norinalj i n order of relative depth, Island of Puerto Rico, 1899 to 19% I Least Greatest Groups Range No. 1 ................................... No. 2 ................................... No. 3 ................................... No. 4 ................................... Puerto Rice..-. ........................ TABLE 5.-Coinparative data on the rainfall i n Puerto Rico during 1968, by sections, inches rainjall, and percent of normal North ..................... 1802 115 1689 110 1909 108 1932 106 1928 107 East ....................... 1903 120 1905 I17 1927 117 1904 1lS 1 9 3 110 South ..................... 1912 134 1932 124 1899 123 1928 122 1901 118 West ...................... 1032 110 1904 108 1699 108 1914 106 1903 106 Island ..................... 1 i i I l l i !i I l 1909 115 1926 114 1933 112 1899 110 1911 107 I North 1 East South West - Per :en1 71 26 97 107 3 3 190 60 164 118 65 1M 174 124 - - Per- Cent 111 28 63 85 180 68 1M 129 182 100 69 68 110 - - Per. :cnt 121 42 103 181 149 148 153 128 104 102 8.3 121 i a i - TABLE 3.-Percentage rainfall departure from normal b y sections: Puerto Rico. 1899-1932 - Island Percent IM 131 119 98 101 lo0 96 85 94 - i i n - Inchca 6.36 .67 2.71 4.34 11.70 8. 26 5.90 6.46 11.57 7.21 6.80 6.38 78.36 Inchca 1.02 .48 1.63 2.60 10.60 6.98 2. 25 7.58 6.69 4. M 4.85 3. 14 52.02 'nches 2.60 .70 2.29 5. M 14. 23 5.02 8.79 11.76 17.11 9. 75 5. 11 2.23 84.63 January. - __ - __ - - - - ._ February _____________ March ______.___ ___.._ April. ................ May. ................ June.. - __ ____ _..____ - July- ____ - - - .._. . - - - August ._---- -- ------ - September - - - - - __ - - __ October. ............. November--- ._ - -. __ -. December. ........... Year ............ __ East Percrni 102 109 137 120 (59 115 117 96 74 94 - Percent Pcrcenl 123 I 10s 133 91 118 127 STORM TYPES AND RESULTANT PRECIPITATION IN THE SAN DIEGO AREA DEAN BLAKE [Weather Bureau, San Diego, Calif., 19331 At the request of engineers and water conservationists of southern California, who are not satisfied with the rate and intensity alone of the rainfall but wish also to laow something of its origin, tables were prepared which segregated storms inSan Diego County into four groups ac- cording to their genesis. Weather maps of the north Pacific Ocean are available in San Diego for only the last 5 years, hence the data could not be carried back farther than 1929. From available weather-reporting stations in San Diego County, 3 were selected, San Diego, 87 feet eleva- tion, Cuyamaca, 4,677; and Warner Springs, 3,165. The criteria were length and dependability of record, eleva- tion, and surrounding topography. San Diego was con- sidered as representative of the coastal, Cuyamaca the mountain, and Warner Springs the intermediate rainfall regimes. Warner Springs m particular is well located for a ra.infa11 study, for i t is surrounded in all directions by nioderately high mountains, and the effects of the dynamical or a,scensional cooling of the rain-bearing winds here are nearly equal, regardless of the direction from which they come. On the other hand, the rain gage at Cu- yamaca is exposed in a draw, and records very heavy rains when winds are from the southwest quadrant. In fact, i t is located at one of the rainy spots of southern California. From data of the three stations, three tables have been compiled: (1) The total number of days and amounts of 224 MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW AUGUST 1933 rain froni storms of each type; (2) the number of days, amounts and percentages of precipitation for each of the five seasons produced by storms of each type; (3) sea.sona1 precipit,ation and departures froni the mean. There is little differe,iice in the number of rainy da.ys a t tlie stations, so the figures for Sa.n Diego are mcepted RS represe,ntative of all three. Ot,lier tables were pmpared, among which was one showing the number of days with four arbitrarily kxed amounts. At the outset it was realized that the place of origin of many of the storms would be in doubt, lack of data pre- venting us from tracing their source or their movements in the early stages of their careers. Four broadly generalized types or groups were immedi- ately apparent. The first, designate.d the nort,h Pacific type, includes all cases of low-pressure are,a.s t1ia.t' a.p- proached the mainland froni t,he Pacific Ocean nort'li of Sa.n Francisco. The second, designated 6he south Pacific type, c.omprises a.11 disturbances that came from the ocean south of San Francisco a.nd nort,li of the Tropic of Cancer. The third, designated the interior type, con- tains 8.11 active depressions that origina,t,ed or developed over the plateau regions, the Colorado Valley, or the California interior. (An appreciable number of these were secondary disturba.nces to parent LOWS passing eastwa.rd ne,ar t,he Canadian border or through the Cana- dian Nort>hwest.) The fourth, designated the Mexican type, consists of the tropical disturba.nces t,hat occasion- ally moved nort,hwa,rd to southern California from tlie west coast of Mexico, and also, not logically but a.s a mat- ter of convenience, the few sporadic thunderstorms of the warmer months, know-ii 1oca.lly as " Sonora,s. " This afforded an index to the rainfall rate. NORTH PACIFIC TYPE This group ties in naturally with the recognized and fun- damental typesset forth by Thomas R.Reed? As he stat,es, his westerly types, which may be associated with the nort,h Pacific type of this pa.per, and have t,he same characteiistics, "ruc well to the south on many occasions" and when their paths are more southerly than usual, southern California is found within t,lie precipitation area. This type is respon- sible, for most of the rainy da.ys, the largest falls, and the greatest number.of days of any given intensity. The general trend of norther storm tracks is southward with the approach of winte,r, but not until November is sout,hern California within the precipitation a.rea. The amount of precipitation and the number of days with rain increase until the maximum is reached in Ja.nuary, after which, with the re,t,urn northward of the storm paths, both become le,ss and end completely in May. It is wort,liy of nobe that days with rain are about equally frequent from February to May, while the c,atch falls off materially, de,noting a decrease in energy rather than in the number of storms. This type appears to be the most dependa.ble of the four. Large excesses and deficiencies in seasonal totals seem to be due more ofte,n to a.n unusual number of storms of the other types rather than to wide varhtions in the north Pacific group. SOUTH PACIFIC TYPE Apropos of his easterly type, Reed states: Lows of like origin sometimes form over the southern California coast on t,he tropical side of an overrunning southwest high, or they may lodge there after running south along the eastern flank of a nort,h-south HIGH which, after t.heir passage, presses inland over t,he Pacific Northwest. in a quasi-enveloping movement. 1 Sonora Storms, D. Blake. Monthly Weather Review, November 1923. f Weather types of t.he nort.heest Pacific Ocean as related to the weather of bhe north Pacific coast. T . R. Reed. Mo. WEA. REVIEW, December 1932, vol. 60, pp. 346-253. Lows of this nature are re,sponsible in the main for st,orms c.1assifie.d under t,he soiit'li Pacific, t,ype. At t,inies, t,liough, disturbances t,hat are associate,d wit,h Reed's southerly t8ype take t,he form of n t,rough, and lie near enough to the coast to bring San Diego County under the dominat,ion of the secondary depressions that form in the lower end of the trough. This group is also chssi- fied under the south Pacific. type. The appeara.nce of storms in this area is haphazard, and wide variations in number and rainfall amounts are found, but apparently condit,ions are most favorable for their formation during February, a,s they have proved to be the best rain producers during that month of any of t,he four t'ypes. They de.ve.lop from November to March, move quickly, travel singly, and produc,e wa,rm and not infrequently very he.avy rains, part,icularly a t stations where t)he mounta,in ranges parallel the. c,oast. INTERIOR TYPE By far, t,he most, int,eresting and complicated disturb- ances are of the interior type. Storms of this nature cor- respond t'o those which are t'he result of Reed's nort,herly typ?. While the.ir bree.ding place appears to be the Great Basin most of the t,inie,, neverthele,ss they develop any- where over the far weste,rn interior, Their growth and subsequent movemenhs are erratsic and hard to predict wibh any great degree of accurac.y. Before the last dec.ade the temptation w-as to ignore them as potential heavy rain producers. The tables show that in San Diego County 32 percent of the tot8al number of rainy days and about 30 pe.rc.ent of the precipitation resulted from storms assigna.ble to this type, and that 24-hour amounts gre,ater than an inch we.re fre,quent. Because of t8he large high pressure area over the ocean off the coast of California at the t,iine these LOWS form, too little w-eight usua,lly is given to bhe drop in barometer that pre- cedes their genesis, and before we are aware of it, general, and in many cases, heavy rain has begun over all of south- ern California. While interior stornis are most active from February to May, t,hey may form in any month of the year. During t)he last 5 ye,ars, however, none was t,abulated during July or January. MEXICAN TYPE The fourth and last, the Mexican t8ype, is responsible for only a small percent of the whole number, but the amounts of their precipitation a t Cuyamaca and Warner Springs are much greater than a t San Diego, and add materially to the season's totals. Only occasionally do they Cross San Diego County. They originate in the tropics south and west of Baja California, and move northward, and only through c,hance radio reports from ships that happen to be in their path are we able to follow them. Occurring at a t,inie when fruits and grapes are ripening or drying, they always are most unwelcome. Torrential rains often are the re,sult, a t which times dam- age to property is gre,at, railways and highways suffering heavily. An example of particularly destruckive rains of t8his type was the storm in the Tehachipi Mountains of September 25 to Ockober 1, 1932, where the loss of life was 15 and the damage was estimated to be over $i,000,000.3 Fortunately they are limited to the period from August to November, and years have passed wit,h- out one of serious proportions reaching this part of the State. a Destructive rains in the Tehachipi Mountains, Kern County, Calif. M. Gprague, in October 1932 Climatological Data, California section. AUGUST 1933 MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW 225 TABLE 1.-Total number of days with rain from each type at S a n Diego, and total amounts from each type at S a n Diego, Cicyamaca, Warner Springs, during the last jive seasons Days 3 5 7 11 3 N0rt.h Pacific 1 Amounts 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 .3 i 1.65 3.46 5 .2 .34 0 0 0 0 0 0 ____ I I I July. ............... August ............. September.. - -. - .. October ............ November.. ....... December.. ........ January.. .......... February. ......... March. ............ April ............... May ............... June.. -. -. - - - - -. - .. Percent. -. -. . Total.. .___ Cuya- Warner 1 ~a n ~i e g o I maca I springs Month - - 106 5o 1 i2S9 I ;J51 1 :;36 I 1-1- ~. 0 0 0 0 10 17 39 11 9 10 10 0 ~. 1 Days I Amounts IAmounts 1Amounts ~- 0 0 0 0 1.66 5.85 11.83 2.05 1.40 .96 .84 0 ___- -- 0 0 0 0 5. 26 23.97 30. CM 13.45 5. 29 7.99 5.51 0 __- 0 0 0 0 1.03 2.9i 13.63 13. 6.Q 2.09 0 0 0 33.40 17 ~~- 0 0 0 4 0 1 0 3 .51 6 1.52 3 6.08 0 8.40 10 51 14 0 10 0 4 17.03 6s 20 33 0' 13 --___~ 0 .os .M .41 1. 11 .85 0 3.26 3. 11 4.30 1.80 .12 15.08 39 - 0 0 0 0 2.03 6. 78 11.40 4. 62 1.87 3.32 1.35 0 0 0 0 0 .05 . 01 3.52 2.01 6.35 2.60 7.72 3.21 0 0 11.04 6.69 7.65 3.99 12.07 4.03 9.43 5. 26 . 16 .06 57.90 2i.86 29 32 ~~~ South Pacific Interior I 0 .03 .23 1.10 .78 0 0 0 0 0 0 San Diego 1.24 0.38 3.03 5.17 1.94 5.30 5.52 2.95 .63 .41 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 29 10.w2 14 ~ 30 hiesican Days 0 2 2 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 4 __ -~~ \mounts Amounts Amounts -~- i l TABLE T-Total number of days with rain and percentages at S a n Diego, and total ainoicnts and percentages from each type by seasons at San Diego, C'uyaniaca, and Warner Springs NORTH PA4CIFIC TABLE L-Total nicmber of days ruzth rain and percentages at S a n Diego, and total amounts and percentayes from each type by seasons at S a n Diego, C',icyamaca, m i d Warner Spri~~gs--Continued MEXICAN 193-29 ............... 25 GO 5.12 73 35.05 70 S.75 71 19%-30. .............. 43 4 01 3; 15.34 37 5.09 25 1930-31 ............... ............. 1 3 9 , 4 .4 i i 30.23 8.4'31 321 3.251 8.86 27 36 1931-32. ti. S6 1933-33. ............. 4. 13 3!1 11 $1 5 .3 Y 32 1928-29 ............... 1 2 0.02 0 0 0 0.08 1 5.06 12 3.87 19 15-%30. 193&31 1531-3 ............... 1 0 :z I L A i ! 3:iii I; 1932-33.. ............. 1. 10 5. 52 3.10 18 .............. ................ SOUTH PACIFIC 19%29 ............... 1 2 0.10 1 0.73 2 0.28 2 19%-30. .............. 14 1.51 14 8.95 21 4. i 6 23 1930-31 ............... 1931-33 .............. 1 'i 1 !i I ~~~~ 1 ii 1 i:g I 1 i?! 1 193M3 ............... 14 INTERIOR TABLE 3.-Precipitation and departures from the mean ut S a n Diego, Cicyainacn, and Warner Springs during the last five seasons Warner Springs Cuyamaca San Diego Season 1938-29 ............... 15 36 1.86 26 5.77 25 3.16 38 19x1-30- .............. 4.99 47 12.30 30 6.89 33 1930-31.. ............... ............. 1 I) 3.46 1.891 "1 11.38 9.291 "1 8.66 3.961 34 25 1931-33 1932-33. .............. 2.88 27 15.30 38 6. 19 36 19B-29 ................. 1 i. 10 -2.65 1 35.55 193-30 ................. 10.73 +.9S 41.65 193&31 ................. 10.78 4-1.03 2 6 .Z 1931-32 ................. 13.1'3 +3.43 53.58 1932-33 ................. 10.63 +.88 40.14 -3.35 12.30 -5.48 +2.'35 20.61 +2.MB -13.02 I 11.86 1 -5.02 +14. 78 35.14 +i.36 +1.34 17.18 -.eo HOURLY FREQUENCY AND INTENSITY OF RAINFALL AT SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. By R. C. COUNTS, Jr. [Weather Bureau, San Francisco, Calif., August 19331 [Compare: McDonald, W. F., Hourly Frequenry and Intensity of Rainfall at New Orleans, La. Mo. WEA. REV., January 1929, vol. 57, pp. 1-81 The hourly rainfall data for San Francisco present several aspects, the most interestin of which is the de- and early morning hours than a t midday or in the after- noon. This phase of t8he rainfall has long been a subject for comment, even by comparative newcomers to this area, but heretofore neither the exact facts nor their causes were known, and comment was based large,ly on conjecture. Data have been compiled for the 20-year period, 1911-30, whic,h, it is believed, is of sufficient length to a t least greably reduce any effects resulting from pronounced abnormalities. The data were tabulated from the daily records of the local Weather Bureau office. These records contain not only the times of beginning and ending of precipitation but also the hourly amounts, which were estracted from the 24-hour record sheets of a self- recording rain gage of the tipping bucket type. Eac.h 0.01 inch is registered on the sheets in the pr0pe.r hour division, but occasionally this unit amount mag be re- corded in 1 hour yet be an accumulation of rain ext,ending over several hours; especially is this true of a drizzle or cidedly greater frequency of rain d uring the late night heavy mist. It is reasonable to believe, however, that such cases are as numerous in any hour as another and that the relation of the total hours with a measurable amount, or the total hourly amounts, is unaffected. In the first compilation the individual hours with 0.01 inch or more, by months, in the 20 years were counted. The sums obtained showed the trend of the hourly fre- quency for each of the calendar months but the sums for no month were strictly comparable with those of any other because of the variation in length of the months. To obviate this the sums were r0duce.d to a percentage basis, shown in table 1, by dividing the total hours with a nieasurable quantity of rain by the total number of hours. In the 31-day months the possible hours for each of the 24 were 620, in the months of 30 days there were 600, and in February, 5 of which were in leap years, the divisor was 565. The annual hourly frequency percent- ages were found by dividing the number of rainy hours of the same name in all monlhs by the possible 7,305 hours to obtain greater accuracy than the means of the rnon thly hourly percentages would have given.