MPR’s Tim Post interviews meteorologist Mark Seeley about the reasons behind the “extreme” drought conditions in northern Minnesota. Seeley states main culprit is the jet stream.
With a rain deficit of three to six inches, Minnesota watched for weeks as summer rains skirted to their south during the summer of 2006. Farm fields were left parched, and river and stream levels are neared the low water marks they hit during the region's last major drought in 1988.