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Web results
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Professor Peter Stott
, the Guardian and a Carbon Brief blog on recent floods. Peter has a first degree in Mathematics from Durham University and completed Part III of the Mathematics Tripos at Cambridge University. The research for his PhD at Imperial College, London was atmospheric modelling of the environmental consequences
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Non-Executive Directors
-chaired the Aberdeen Maggie’s cancer charity for five years. He holds an MA in Natural Sciences from Cambridge University and a PhD from London University and was awarded a CBE for his services to the Energy Sector. Andy lives on a North Devon coastal farm, where he and his wife are enhancing
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review-of-sea-level-rise-literature-for-pakistan---arrcc-report---external.pdf
. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. IPCC (2000) Special Report on Emissions Scenarios (SRES) – A Special Report of Working Group III of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Edited by N. Nakicenovic and R. Swart. Cambridge University Press. IPCC (2001a) Climate Change 2001: The Scientific
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HCVI_website_model_spread_v1.pdf
, V. Bex and P.M. Midgley (eds.)]. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, NY, USA, 1535 pp, doi:10.1017/CBO9781107415324. Taylor, K.E., R.J. Stouffer, and G.A. Meehl, 2012: An Overview of CMIP5 and the experiment design.” Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc., 93, 485-498, doi:10.1175/BAMS-D-11- 00094.1. © Crown copyright 2015 23
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mwr_2024_08_for_print.pdf
of England, which brought heavy downpours and some flooding. Temperatures were above or around average for the first week, and then a warm spell moved in from the 10th. The 12th saw the highest temperature of the year so far, 34.8°C, recorded in Cambridge, while thunderstorms spread across Scotland
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excalibur_newsletter_1120.pdf
in the 2040’s, click here). Initial activities are designed to form an “exploratory phase” and to build a UK wide community around the project. Weather and climate use case The weather and climate use case has commissioned the UK Chemistry & Aerosol (UKCA) activity to the University of Cambridge
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record-breaking-heat-and-sunshine---july-2006---met-office.pdf
Station Highest Earliest year Ranking of highest Current or previous any month Temperature (°C) / for records temperature record (°C) / Date Date Wisley, Surrey 36.5 / 19th 1904 2 37.8 / 10 August 2003 Cambridge Botanic Garden 35.6 / 19th 1904 4 36.9 / 10 August 2003 Heathrow, Greater London 35.5 / 19th
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Increasing influence of climate change on UK climate
temperature records Although sitting outside the top ten warmest years in the series (all since 2002), 2019 was most remarkable for setting four UK high temperature records, including: A new all-time record (38.7° C) 25 July, Cambridge University Botanic Gardens (Cambridgeshire) A new winter record (21.2
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exceptional-warmth-september-2016---met-office.pdf
stations. On 13 September temperatures exceeded 30 °C across much of East Anglia and Kent, with 34.4 °C at Gravesend (Kent), 33.5 °C at Kew Gardens (Greater London) and 32 °C reached at Writtle (Essex), Bedford and Cambridge. The chart below compares hourly air temperatures recorded at two locations
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uk_monthly_climate_summary_201809pdf
%. Sunshine was 108% of average, and it was broadly sunnier in eastern areas than further west, with the London area having over 130% of normal sunshine. The UK monthly extremes were as follows: A maximum temperature of 26.5 °C was recorded at Cambridge Botanic Gardens (Cambridgeshire) on the 17th. A minimum