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NCIC Monthly Summary

was generally larger by day than by night. Rainfall was 104% of average, and it was a wet month in the north-west but drier than average in most southern areas and near the north-east coast. Sunshine was 85% of average; it was a very dull month in many central and northern counties but sunshine was close

NCIC Monthly Summary

hot in central and eastern areas on the 31st. The mean temperature for July was provisionally 0.6 °C below the 1981-2010 long-term average. The negative temperature anomaly was generally larger by day than by night. Rainfall was 104% of average, and it was a wet month in the north-west but drier than

xin-rong-chua-sandeep-sahany-aurel-moise-gill-martin-muhammad-eeqmal-hassim-gerald-lim-chen-chen-venkatraman-prasanna---the-effects-of-convection-permitting-downscaling-on-sub-dailyprecipitation-characteris.pdf

>100 mm/day 50 - 100 mm/day 0.005 - 10 mm/day 10 - 50 mm/day The Effects of Convection-permitting Downscaling on Sub-daily Precipitation Characteristics Over the Western Maritime Continent Xin Rong Chua, Sandeep Sahany, Aurel Moise, Gill Martin, Muhammad Eeqmal Hassim, Gerald Lim, Chen Chen

Microsoft Word - 2020_09_storm_alex.docx

and widespread heavy rain on 3rd to 4th. Parts of central southern England and eastern Scotland recorded totals of 100mm or more in the first four days of the month, and on 3 October many weather stations recorded their wettest October day on record. The extensive nature of the rain resulted

distillation_workshop_report.pdf

decisionmakers require to improve their resilience? In this two-day workshop following SASCOF-15, participants engaged in interactive sessions and open dialogue to better understand decision-making contexts, and the nature of distilling and communicating complex, scientific information in a way that enables

NCIC Monthly Summary

fog in the north-west, and sunshine for all once the cloud in the south-east cleared away, but northern areas clouded over later. 5th to 15th During the next fortnight, frosts were regular and often widespread. The north dawned clear on the 5th, a generally cold and windy day for all, with rain

uk_monthly_climate_summary_201912.pdf

. 1st to 6th The 1st was a dry sunny cold day except for a few showers in eastern coastal counties which penetrated into East Anglia and the south-east, with a minimum of -7.9 °C at Shap (Cumbria) and a maximum of just -0.9 °C at Bewcastle (Cumbria). From the 2nd to 4th it turned milder by day

hazard-manager-flood-guidance.pdf

, you will see the County Map, with Day 1 shown by default (Fig 3). Each local authority area is coloured according to the level of overall risk within that area from any flood source. Fig 3: County Map showing flood risk by local authority Fig 4: Mobile view of County Map To find out more information

hazard-manager-beta-user-guide--flood-guidance-england--wales.pdf

&W area, you will see the County Map, with Day 1 shown by default (Fig 3). Each local authority area is coloured according to the level of overall risk within that area from any flood source. Fig 3: County Map showing flood risk by local authority Fig 4: Mobile view of County Map To find out more

NCIC Monthly Summary

Airport suffered delays and cancellations, whilst later that day over 50 people were stranded on the A85 near Crianlarich where a rest centre was hastily convened for the overnight period. The weekend of the 17th/18th saw the cold spell finally relent, and on the 18th much of the Pennines, North

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