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			2nd-wettest October on record 
			 
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            [November 03, 2009] 
            CHAMPAIGN -- Based on 
			preliminary data in Illinois, the statewide average rainfall was 8.9 
			inches, 6.0 inches above normal. This is the second-wettest October 
			on record for the state, based on data going back to 1895. It almost 
			beat the wettest October on record, 9.2 inches set in 1941, 
			according to Jim Angel, state climatologist, of the Illinois State 
			Water Survey.  
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             Rainfall was heaviest in southern Illinois, with many places 
			reporting 8 to 12 inches for the month. A few standout reports 
			included record-setting amounts of 13.98 inches at Jerseyville, 
			13.63 inches at Mount Olive and 13.31 inches at Riverton. Decatur 
			and Bloomington-Normal set their all-time records with 10.09 and 
			10.18 inches, respectively.
			While not record-setting, the following locations reported an 
			exceptionally wet October. Rockford reported its fifth-wettest 
			October on record with 5.94 inches, while Chicago reported its 
			ninth-wettest with 6.04 inches. Champaign, Peoria and Springfield 
			reported their second-wettest October on record with 8.79, 7.95, and 
			11.32 inches, respectively. Carbondale reported its third wettest 
			with 10.01 inches.  
			Temperatures across Illinois averaged 49.8 degrees, 4.8 degrees 
			below normal. Most locations reported a freezing temperature (32 
			degrees or less) for the month, signaling the end of the growing 
			season. Elizabeth was the cold spot in the state with a low of 23 
			degrees on Oct. 11.  
			"October was a gloomy month, especially in northern Illinois. 
			Chicago reported two sunny days and Rockford only one. Downstate was 
			a little better, with eight sunny days reported in Peoria and 
			Champaign, nine in Springfield, and 14 in Carbondale," Angel said.
			 
			The Illinois State Water 
			Survey at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, under 
			the Institute of Natural Resource Sustainability, is the primary 
			agency in Illinois concerned with water and atmospheric resources.
			 
			
            [Text from file received from 
			the Illinois 
			State Water Survey]  
            
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