The average rainfall in an olympic rainforest is between 68 and 78 inches. ---- == ==
The average high for the months of June, July, August, and September at Olympic National Park are 63, 67, 69, and 66; respectively. The average lows for those months are 48, 51, 51, and 47. In the mountains, temps get lower.
The largest rainforest in the US is the Hoh Rainforest in Olympic National Park, located in the state of Washington. It receives high levels of precipitation and supports a diverse range of plant and animal species typical of a temperate rainforest ecosystem.
America's rain forests are located in Alaska between the Arctic Circle and the Tropic of Cancer, and are therefore called temperate rain forests. The only tropical rain forests in the United States and its territories are in Puerto Rico.
47 degrees north latitude and 123 degrees west longitude
A forest has many layers of plant life. There are the small plants such as shrubs, moss, ferns, and lichens which grow quietly beneath the shadows of the tall trees. The trees found in a temperate forest are called hardwoods.
Yes, Washington is home to a temperate rainforest known as the Hoh Rainforest, located in Olympic National Park on the Olympic Peninsula. It receives a high amount of rainfall and has lush vegetation typical of a rainforest ecosystem.
Hawaii. The rainfall there isn't all over the state, but there is one place on the island of Kauai that is actually the wettest place on the entire planet.
76
According to a Forks, Wa. real estate web page the annual average rainfall is 121 inches.
Washington State, USA; it is inside of the Olympic National Park
The Hoh Rainforest in Olympic National Park, located in Washington state, is one of the rainiest and cloudiest places in the United States. It receives an average of 140-170 inches (or 355-432 cm) of annual rainfall and is shrouded in clouds for much of the year.
Canada doesn't have a rainforest. The only rainforest in North America is the Olympic rainforest in Washington.
Olympic Peninsula
The temperature of an olympic pool is kept at 25-28C (77-82F)
The rainiest PLACES in the continental U.S. are--by far--in the Pacific Northwest. The rainiest spot is the Hoh Rainforest in the Olympic Peninsula, with 170 inches per year (that's 14 FEET of rainfall!) There are dozens of small towns and villages along the Washington and Oregon coast that exceed 100" of rainfall per year, led by Aberdeen Reservoir, WA, with 130.6" per year, Laurel Mountain, OR, 122.3 and Forks, WA, 119.7" per year. The user below mistakenly named the rainiest CITIES in the U.S., not the rainiest PLACES.However, the rainiest place in the continental U.S. is Forks, Washington. I bet you are a Twilight fan? Me too.no the rainiest place in the U.S. is Mount Waialeale on the Hawaiian island of Kauaithe rainist place in the continental u.s. is the foothill villages near Mount Washington, N.H.check out this linkhttp://seattlepi.nwsource.com/getaways/030697/rainbar.htmlFrom QuileuteWolves96: Actually the rainiest inhabited place in the U.S is the Olympic peninsula... either Forks or Quillayute. The rainiest place in all of the U.S. is Mount Waialeale.Olympic peninsula is only correct if you're counting the number of days it rains (it comes in at 63). If you're asking for the rainiest (as in, Most Rain) the Olympic Pen doesn't even crack the top 10. It's number 24! Here's the real list:Mobile, Alabama--67 inches average annual rainfall; 59 average annual rainy daysPensacola, Florida--65 inches average annual rainfall; 56 average annual rainy daysNew Orleans, Louisiana--64 inches average annual rainfall; 59 average annual rainy daysWest Palm Beach, Florida--63 inches average annual rainfall; 58 average annual rainy daysLafayette, Louisiana--62 inches average annual rainfall; 55 average annual rainy dayssource: http://www.livescience.com/environment/070518_rainy_cities.html
The Olympic rainforest in WA state is pretty cool.
olympic rainforest