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In some literature that rainfall in the Mediterranean forest is very high. Rainfall data that actually shows large numbers, for example in Assam exceeding 11,000 mm / year, in Bogor Approximately 4,500 mm / year. Important things are very different from local and special conditions. In general, in large areas and repeated observations for a long time, rainfall in the region is only given between 2,500 to 4,000 mm / year.

- On Mount Waialeale (Hawaii)

Rain can fall to 11,500 millimeters per year, even more over time. This mountain is a volcanic area so it is exposed to clouds and moisture coming from the sea, which literally acts as a cloud of land barrier around.

- in New Zealand (Milford Track, and of course, is one of the wettest places (6,000 to 8,000 millimeters per year).

- Gunung Mulu (Malaysia)

5,000 mm per year in the rainforest of Mount Mulu, in the heart of the island of Borneo in Malaysia.

- Yakushima Island (Japan)

Yakushima is a Japanese island with perennial floods. A place where there is rainfall between 4,000 and 10,000 mm of water per year,

BMP Tropical Forest Ecology

That would be the 48 hour rainfall of cherrapunji, India. It is considered the wettest place in the world and as such experiences heavy rains more frequently than anywhere else in the world. this constant wetness is as a result of an almost uninterrupted flow of moisture from the bay of Bengal. Cherrapunji boasts of the 48 hour world record of 98.15 inches of rainfall which occurred on the 15-16 of June 1995. And also the one year world record of 86 ft, 10inches