Cherrapunji-The land of Highest Rainfall
Cherrapunji-The land of Highest Rainfall

Meteorologists believe that the Mawsynram area plays a key role in causing heavy rainfall to fall there. Moisture is collected in the Bay of Bengal and causes rainfall in the region, leading to heavy and long periods of rainfall. The rains in Mawsynram are so heavy that villagers use thick grass to block out the noise in their houses to stop the rain.
The village of Mawsynram is located in the East Khasi Hill District of Meghalaya 15 km west of Cherrapunji, 1400 m above sea level. The average annual rainfall at Mawsynrams last season (1951-2000) was 123,973 mm compared to 117,203 mm in Cherrapuji. However, the 118.72 mm rainfall received by the village is slightly higher than that of the city.
Rainfall at Mawsynram Station is much better than in Cherrapunji according to the Meghalaya Planning Department's annual reports from 1970 to 2010 (the 1970s to 2010). Long-term changes in rainwater harvesting in Meghalaya, which is said to be home to some of the world's wettest areas, are responsible for a significant shift from the world's wetlands to Cherrapinji and Mawsynrams, which was only 1.5 km outside of recent decades. The latter recorded an average annual rainfall of 11,871 mm, while the first was prepared for heavy rainfall with an average annual rainfall of 11,430 mm.
The Guinness Book of Records reports on the average annual rainfall in Mawsynram (118.73 mm) and states that it is the wettest place on earth 16 km from Cherrapunji. A study by Thapliyal and S. M. Kulshrestha with 26 years of available rainfall data (1941-78) found that the mid-year rainfall of Maw Synchronram was twice as high as that of Cherrapinji (11,763 mm). The average monthly and annual rainfall at Maw synchronism and Cherrapenji are shown in Table 1.
The Indian village of Mawsynram in the Meghalaya region is the wettest place on Earth, with 46.7 inches of rainfall annually. The type of climate that brings heavy rainfall to Cherrapunji in India, a landlocked country, is called the monsoon. During the dry winter months of December and February, there is little rainfall.
As a result of the storm, up to 90 percent of the annual recorded rainfall dropped in six months from May to October. July is the wettest month in the world with the highest rainfall at 3500 mm every month. A prominent feature of the rainy season in Sohra is that most of them fall in the morning.
Cooling causes moisture trapped in the air that blows across the plains to thicken and form clouds that release rain. Regular exposure to wet air for six months at a time leads to continuous rainfall. Moisture from the Arabian Sea brings heavy rains to Mahabaleshwar.
Not surprisingly, heavy rainfall occurs when winds blow from Kasi Hills. Rainfall is evenly distributed throughout the year, explains I. There is no obvious difference of opinion on normal rainfall patterns or the likelihood of wetness.
There is a tropical hot stream from the Pacific Ocean, and the northern Andes, extending westward across the country, blocks the river, resulting in continuous rainfall in Colombian rain cities.
One of the wettest regions in the world, Cherrapunji in Meghalaya, has an average annual rainfall of 11,430 mm during the rainy season from May to September. The town of Cherrap Inji is 1,290 feet [1,290 m] above sea level, and heavy rainfall overflows into mountain valleys, with an annual rainfall of about six feet [1,270 cm]. One Waialeale receives five times as much rain as any other mountain except Kauai.
Cherrapunji is located in East Khasi Hills in the Indian state of Meghalaya and holds the highest Guinness World rainfall record, including the record for the highest rainfall in one year (1860-1861 9055 inches) and the highest rainfall per month after 350 inches of rain in July 1861. Cheap Unji is available on the southern slopes of the eastern Himalayas near Shillong, India, and is considered to be the wettest place on earth with an annual rainfall of 11,430 mm per year.
A weather forecast that dates back to 1902, when weather records began in the region, put Cherrapunji ahead with the rain. Annual rainfall of 11,777 mm was recorded in Cherrapuji in 1974 while recording the highest annual rainfall anywhere in the world.
The record held by Cherrapunji in Meghalaya in the Guinness Book of World Records is 9,300 mm in July 1861 Guinness Book World Records. CherrapUNJI, Meghalayan city, CherrapUNJI, has a 12-month record of 264.61 mm of rainfall received between August 1, 1860, and July 31, 1861, when it was declared the wettest place on Earth with an annual rainfall of 118.72 mm, more than ten times the average. -10.83 mm. From June 1 to 28 August August 47,302 mm of rain fell on the city, the second wettest place in the world in Meghalaya province, compared to 69.60 mm in the same period last year. 118. 72mm Rain in Cherokee Adventure, World's Wettest Place: A Story of Cloud Life in the Wet World.
In March 1942, Puu Kukui recorded 25,654 mm of rain, the highest rainfall ever recorded in the United States. It also holds the annual rain record in the U.S. With more than 17,902 mm of rain in 1982.
According to the All India Meteorological Department (IMD), Mahabaleshwar in Maharashtra (Maharashtra) is considered to be the wettest region of India, with Mawsynram and Cherrapunji in neighboring Meghalaya. Sohra gets rain in the Bay of Bengal on the arm of the Indian summer storm. On the other hand, the discovery of the Mahabaleyshwars in the Bay of Bengal and the hills of Page on the other hand allows for heavy rainfall to fall there.


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