Drought has parched the Northeast United States for weeks, draining reservoirs, priming the landscape for damaging wildfires and pushing politicians to implement water-saving measures.
More than 58% of the Northeast is in moderate drought or worse, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor . The drought is particularly extreme in New Jersey, which has seen its driest conditions in nearly 120 years . Some areas have experienced 40 days without measurable rainfall.
Little more rainfall is in the near-term forecast.
"Two words tend to come to mind. One is 'unprecedented' and the other is 'remarkable,'" said Dave Robinson, New Jersey's state climatologist.
In New Jersey, more than 500 fires have started since Oct. 1, largely due to abnormally dry conditions. Gov. Phil Murphy on Wednesday declared a drought warning and asked residents to do everything they could to conserve water.
In New York City, brush fires scorched portion s of Prospect and Inwood Hill parks over the past week. Earlier this month, Mayor Eric Adams issued a drought watch , ordering city agencies to prepare water conservation plans.
Here are the photos that tell the story of how this has played out for people in the Northeast.
Mark Hockman, of Penn View Farms, shows the damage done to drought-stricken ear of corn in Perkasie, Pa. on Oct. 22.
Cows eating on the side of the Penn View Farm building in Perkasie, Pa., on Oct. 22.
Rows of drought-stricken corn at Penn View Farm in Perkasie, Pa., on Oct. 22.
Several homes were evacuated as a wildfire spread through the Colliers Mills Wildlife Management Area in Ocean County, N.J., on Nov. 5.
Smoke from a wildfire in the Palisades area of Englewood Cliffs, N.J., moves across the Hudson River behind the George Washington Bridge on Nov. 8 in New York City.
A fire in Prospect Park, in New York City, on Nov. 8.
A large brush fire burns in Englewood Cliffs, N.J., on Nov. 8.
Smoke rises from the Jennings Creek Wildfire in New Jersey on Nov. 9.
Wildfires in New Jersey are leading to smoky skies and diminished air quality around the tristate area of the East Coast in the United States. As dangerous air quality hits New York City, Mayor Eric Adams issued an air quality alert Nov. 9.
A wildfire burns on the border of New York and New Jersey in Greenwood Lake, N.Y., on Nov. 9.
A firefighter battles a wildfire in Greenwood Lake, N.Y., as it approaches a road on Nov. 10.
The Jennings Creek Wildfire burning behind a home in Greenwood Lake, N.Y., on Nov. 10.
Low water levels at the Wanaque Reservoir in Ringwood, N.J., on Nov. 11.
Smoke rises from a wildfire behind a row of lakefront properties in the town of Awosting, as seen from across Greenwood Lake, Lakeside, N.J., on Nov. 11.
Volunteers get ready to attend to the Jennings Creek Wildfire in the town of Greenwood Lake, N.Y., on Nov. 12.
A dry reservoir bed in the Wanaque Reservoir on Nov. 13. Gov. Phil Murphy announced a drought warning advisory for New Jersey as the state faces prolonged dry conditions.
A New York City Fire Department boat works to put out a brush fire in the Inwood Hill Park section of northern Manhattan on Nov. 13.
Firefighters respond to a brush fire in Inwood Hill Park at the northern tip of Manhattan on Nov. 13. Dozens of firefighters were battling the brush fire in Inwood Hill Park just days after fires in wooded areas of Brooklyn, the Bronx and New Jersey spread smoke across New York City.
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com
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