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  1. How is drought affecting you? You can submit a Condition Monitoring Observer Report (CMOR), including photos. Reporting regularly can help people see what normal, wet and dry conditions look like in your part of the country.

  2. Interactive Map: U.S. Drought Monitor. The U.S. Drought Monitor is updated each Thursday to show the location and intensity of drought across the country, which uses a five-category system, from Abnormally Dry (D0) conditions to Exceptional Drought (D4).

  3. The Drought Monitor summary map identifies general areas of drought and labels them by intensity. D1 is the least intense level and D4 the most intense. Drought is defined as a moisture deficit bad enough to have social, environmental or economic effects.

  4. Maps, narratives, indicators, and data depicting areas of drought and abnormally dry conditions across the North American continent, compiled from national analyses prepared in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico.

  5. The U.S. Drought Monitor (USDM) is a map released every Thursday, showing parts of the U.S. that are in drought. The map uses five classifications: abnormally dry (D0), showing areas that may be going into or are coming out of drought, and four levels of drought: moderate (D1), severe (D2), extreme (D3) and exceptional (D4).

  6. In the menu, users can select whether to view the most recent U.S. Drought Monitor map or earlier versions. The Drought Monitor uses six classifications: None (blank); abnormally dry (D0), showing areas that may be going into or coming out of drought; and four levels of drought from moderate (D1) to exceptional (D4).

  7. Interactive map of drought conditions across the United States. The U.S. Geological Survey's WaterWatch program maps below-normal 7-day average streamflow, identified through comparison to historical streamflow readings, to produce their DroughtWatch map.