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flooding-in-north-yorkshire---19-june-2005---met-office.pdf

Flooding in North Yorkshire - 19 June 2005 Synoptic situation Heavy and thundery downpours developed over north-west England and north Wales around midday, spreading across North Yorkshire through the a ernoon. The worst-affected areas were around the North York Moors, with flooding being reported

early-february-2009-snowfalls---met-office.pdf

in the following map. Stations reporting snow depths of 16 cm or more Snow depth (cm)Station County 29 Mickleham Surrey 23 Alice Holt Lodge Hampshire 21 Guernsey Airport Channel Islands 20 Cupar, Elmwood Agricultural CollegeFife 19 Malham Tarn North Yorkshire 17 Copley Durham 17 High Beach Hertfordshire

january-2005---stormy-spells---met-office.pdf

speed records were set during the month. Impacts January 7/8 - northern England took a battering, with transport and power supplies disrupted. Among the incidents reported were overturned lorries on the A1 in north Yorkshire and Northumberland and the M6 in Cumbria, and delays to train services

Microsoft Word - 2019_008_july_rainfall.docx

Heavy rainfall July 2019 Thunderstorms from an area of low pressure caused flooding across parts of northern England on 30 and 31 July 2019. Intense downpours caused flash-flooding, with 40 to 60mm recorded in one hour across parts of North Yorkshire and around 60 to 80mm or more falling in 2 hours

heavy-rainfall_flooding---june-2007---met-office.pdf

precipitation (mm) average Harlow Hill Reservoir (North Yorkshire)289.9 497 88 years Hull 256.3 487 137 years (*) Dalton Holme (East Yorkshire) 263.5 485 127 years (*) Sheffield (South Yorkshire) 285.6 463 125 years Bradford (West Yorkshire) 261.4 411 97 years (*) a few years missing Areal values for June 2007

north-east-england_-climate-met-office.pdf

North East England: climate This describes the main features of the climate of NE England, the area east of the Pennine watershed from the Scottish border southwards to South Yorkshire. It comprises the counties of Northumberland, Tyne and Wear, Durham, North, West and South Yorkshire

2020_02_storm_ciara.pdf

significant storm across England and Wales overall since 12 February 2014. Ciara also brought persistent heavy rain, particularly focussed across upland areas of north-west England. Over a month’s rain fell across parts of West Yorkshire in around 18 hours with several hundred properties affected

further-rainfall-and-flooding-across-north-of-the-uk---met-office.pdf

flooding to parts of Lancashire, north Manchester and West Yorkshire, while on 29 to 30 December storm Frank brought further very wet and windy weather to southern and western Scotland and Northern Ireland. The sustained period of wet weather set new UK rainfall records. December 2015 was the wettest

exceptional-warmth-april-2018---met-office.pdf

Yorkshire) on 19 April, and 24.9 °C at Bude (Cornwall) on 21 April. The map below shows daily maximum temperatures on the hottest day, 19 April 2018. Temperatures exceeded 25 °C across most of central and eastern England from Hampshire and as far north as Yorkshire. Temperatures exceeded 28 °C in Greater

2022_03_july_heatwave_v1

being recorded as far north as Topcliffe, North Yorkshire and a large part of England exceeding 37°C. In Wales, on 18th July a new national record of 37.1°C was set at Hawarden Airport, Flintshire, while in Northern Ireland 31.2°C was recorded at Derrylin, County Fermanagh, within 0.1°C

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