Snowfall from 67% to 161%: Huge shift in California drought
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Recent storms bearing some of the heaviest snow and rain to hit Northern California in decades have helped bring a dramatic turnaround after more than five years of drought, which covered the state just a year ago.
Here are key numbers to know as the record dry spell eases:
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35 INCHES
Total rain in the last 10 days along California's central coast, according to the National Weather Service
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67 PERCENT
Snowfall in the Sierra Nevada as a percent of average on Jan. 3, according to the weather service
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161 PERCENT
Snowfall in the same mountains as a percent of average on Thursday
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-8 MILLION
Amount of water California's reservoirs were off the average, by acre-feet, or annual supplies for a household, in 2015
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+1.2 MILLION
Amount of water the reservoirs were off the average in January 2017, according to Jay Lund at the University of California, Davis
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2 YEARS
How many years' worth of normal rainfall was missing from the worst-hit parts of California ahead of January's storms, according to hydrologist Claudia Faunt of the U.S. Geological Survey
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174 MPH
Blizzard winds in Sierra Nevada on Jan. 8, measured at Squaw Valley, according to the weather service