Mark Twain Lake Flood of 2008
Posted by: kJfishman
N 39° 29.491 W 091° 48.395
15S E 602622 N 4372002
Mark Twain Lake Flood of 2008 high water mark at the Route U Boat Ramp.
Waymark Code: WMCNEA
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 09/25/2011
Views: 2
This high water mark is from the flood of 2008 at Mark Twain Lake The flood of 2008. From the photos you can get an idea of how high the water was.
The details of the flood from: (
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Into the end of July nearly zonal flow aloft allowed for a series of weather disturbances to traverse the central portion of the nation, while surface high pressure remained fairly strong across the Northern Plains and Great Lakes Region, as well as the southeastern Gulf Coast. The combination of the various weather features resulted in a region of low pressure to remain anchored across the Central Plains and Mid-Mississippi Valley.
These factors resulted in southerly flow from the Gulf Coastal Region to bring moist and unstable air northward and collide with a nearly stationary frontal boundary draped across portions of Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri, and eastward through the Ohio River Valley. With the aid of weather disturbances aloft, a series of thunderstorm complexes moved along the frontal boundary and across the Salt River Basin dropping several inches of rain at a time.
By the very end of July the remnants of Hurricane Dolly moved northward from the Gulf Coast placing an even greater stress over the already swollen and flooded Salt River Basin. With two weeks of heavy rainfall and remnants of Hurricane Dolly, Mark Twain Lake, a flood control reservoir for the Salt River Basin, reached a record level of 640.36 feet on July 30, swelling it to twice its normal size. The previous record was 636.77 feet in 1993. On July 30 the Army Corps of Engineers closed the lake to all boating traffic, and increased the water released through Clarence Cannon Dam into the Salt River to 50,000 cubic feet per second (cfs) resulting in flooding of locales downstream.
"By the end of July multiple locations through Central and Northern Missouri had posted over 10 inch rainfall totals for the month of July (over 15 inches especially for locations within the Salt River Basin ... see July Rainfall Totals) The Midwestern Regional Climate Center concluded, "Based on preliminary data, July 2008 was the 8th wettest on record for Missouri and Illinois, and the 14th wettest on record for the nine-state Midwest region. In addition, January-July precipitation for Missouri, Illinois, and for the Midwest as whole was the greatest on record."