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It was a year of plenty for parched California.

State figures released at the end of the water year, which resets each Oct. 1, tell the story:

The northern Sierra Nevada had its wettest year, 95 inches of precipitation, since record-keeping began in 1895.

In the central Sierra, it was the wettest in more than three decades.

The rain at times overwhelmed the state’s water infrastructure, terrifyingly so in Oroville. But it also ended a five-year drought. Most of California’s major reservoirs remain relatively full.

With a new rainy season within sight, should California brace for a rerun?

Weather scientists offered several variations of “it’s complicated.”