The stats are coming in from Thursday's record-breaking rainfall, and it looks like locations in Baltimore County and in the city topped the charts, with totals of well over 3 inches in some locations.
In fact, an observer in Pimlico, in Baltimore City, reported 3.86 inches - the highest in the tallies so far from the National Weather Service or the CoCoRaHS Network. I also had a call this morning from a reader in Pikesville who recorded 3.9 inches on his rain gauge.
We had 3.10 inches on the Weather Deck in Cockeysville. And The Sun's weather station at Calvert and Centre streets recorded 2.69 inches for the storm.
Many Harford County locations also reported rains in excess of 3 inches.
The official count at BWI-Marshall Airport was 2.61 inches for the date, and 2.63 inches for the storm. That broke the 1.74-inch record for a March 10 in Baltimore, set in 1883. Average March rainfall for Baltimore in March is 3.93 inches, the second-wettest month of the year after September.
Here are the first returns from the National Weather Service:
MARYLAND
...ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY...
1 W ARNOLD 2.34 422 PM 3/10 MESONET
1 N BALT-WASH INTL A 2.32 400 PM 3/10 ASOS
2 NW RIVA 1.51 145 PM 3/10 TRAINED SPOTTER
1 NNW PAROLE 1.20 945 AM 3/10 TRAINED SPOTTER
CHURCHTON 1.20 1000 AM 3/10 TRAINED SPOTTER
...BALTIMORE COUNTY...
1 ENE RUXTON 3.63 505 PM 3/10 MESONET
1 NE LUTHERVILLE 3.45 519 PM 3/10 MESONET
...BALTIMORE CITY...
PIMLICO 3.86 530 PM 3/10 TRAINED SPOTTER
1 ENE BALTIMORE 2.78 513 PM 3/10 MESONET
1 SSE DOWNTOWN BALTI 2.41 400 PM 3/10 ASOS
...CARROLL COUNTY...
MANCHESTER 2.70 524 PM 3/10 MESONET
...HARFORD COUNTY...
2 W CHURCHVILLE 3.58 447 PM 3/10 MESONET
3 N HICKORY 3.52 524 PM 3/10 MESONET
...HOWARD COUNTY...
1 S DANIELS 2.83 519 PM 3/10 MESONET
...PRINCE GEORGES COUNTY...
LAUREL 1.57 200 PM 3/10 PUBLIC
...WASHINGTON COUNTY...
1 NE MAUGANSVILLE 0.81 400 PM 3/10 ASOS
The heavy rains are still running off the land and into area rivers and streams. Many are running at record-high levels for the date. Check out this streamflow map from the US Geological Survey. Dark blue dots represent flows over 90 percent of the record. Black dots indicate record high flows.
(SUN PHOTO: Jerry Jackson, March 10, 2011)