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Sheffield Gale 16 February 1962
Friday 16 February 1962 (Sheffield Gale) Weather chart for 1200 UTC on 16 February 1962 General summary Clearer weather, with showers across the far north and west of the country, continued to push southwards through the morning as the cloud and rain across southern areas moved away into the near
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Microsoft Word - 2019_012_november_rain.docx
Severe flooding South Yorkshire, November 2019 A slow-moving front brought persistent heavy rainfall across parts of Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire and South Yorkshire on 7 November 2019. 50 to 100mm of rain fell in a swathe from the Humber to Sheffield, around the whole-month average
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SPF City Pack_editable_template
SHEFFIELD CLIMATE PACK INTRODUCTION This City Pack provides high level, non-technical summaries of climate change projections for an individual city or town. It uses scientific research to provide robust climate information to help decision makers plan for the future, enabling cities and towns
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Microsoft Word - 2021_09_high_temperatures.docx
of around 2 °C in these locations. For example, at Sheffield a daily minimum temperature of 13.0°C was recorded, compared to the December 1991-2020 long-term average of 2.6 °C. On New Year’s Eve, daily maximum temperatures reached 15 °C across all four nations, with 16.8 °C at Colwyn Bay, Conwy, 16.1 °C
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snow-and-low-temperatures-late-march-2013---met-office.pdf
on 25 April 1981 (one month later in the calendar year). Observed depths included 26 cm at Buxton, Derbyshire and 29 cm at Sheffield, with over 30 cm across the high ground of the Pennines. The photograph below provides an indication of snow depths in Sheffield in late April. Snow in Crookes, a suburb of Sheffield, 27 April 1981 (courtesy David Parker, Met Office Hadley Centre) Last updated: 16 June 2016 © Crown Copyright
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heavy-rainfall_flooding---june-2007---met-office.pdf
of stations which recorded their wettest June and have long series lengths. Some places also had their wettest any month on record, including the following long-running stations: Hull, Bradford and Sheffield. June 2007 - station precipitation values Station June 2007 % of 1961-1990 Series length
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north-east-england_-climate-met-office.pdf
, but there are the Tyne gap linking Carlisle and Newcastle and the Aire gap linking Lancashire and Yorkshire. The other significant area of high ground is the North York Moors, rising to over 400 metres. The major population and industrial centres tend to be associated with the rivers and include Sheffield
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north-east-england_-climate-met-officepdf
, but there are the Tyne gap linking Carlisle and Newcastle and the Aire gap linking Lancashire and Yorkshire. The other significant area of high ground is the North York Moors, rising to over 400 metres. The major population and industrial centres tend to be associated with the rivers and include Sheffield
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strong-winds-and-heavy-rain-from-storms-ali-and-bronagh---met-office.pdf
Bronagh brought further travel disruption and localised flooding in the Sheffield area and mid-Wales. Ferry services from Holyhead to Dublin and some flights from Cardiff Airport were cancelled, while debris and fallen trees blocked some roads and railway lines. The following links from BBC news provide
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Heatwave persists in the south while cloud and rain move into the northwest
Met Office Chief Meteorologist, Paul Gundersen, said: “Temperatures are rising further today with low 30 Celsius widely across England including places like Manchester, Sheffield, Bristol and Cambridge. The highest temperature is expected to be 34C in London and the south east of England
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