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Met Office weekend weather: A warm and dry weekend for most

, particularly across southern and western regions. A brisk breeze will continue across the southwest, and eastern areas may again see a fresh onshore flow that keeps temperatures subdued. READ MORE: Met Office 10-day trend: Warm spells, thundery showers and Atlantic uncertainty Across the Midlands, southern

What is Anticyclonic gloom?

be disrupted by persistent fog, especially in busy corridors like the Midlands and southeast England. For weather communicators, it’s a term that resonates. It captures the paradox of dull weather under high pressure, helping the public understand why a “good” forecast can still feel gloomy. From

publichealthlandcover_writeup.pdf

Planning Policy Guidance, 2014. Examples of data linking health and environment were presented, including air pollution and health outcome data across UK, lifestyle and health behaviour in London, and Urban heat Island during heatwaves and attributable mortality in the West Midlands. Land cover/use

Met Office week ahead forecast: Hot spells for much of the UK

, and Tuesday is forecast to be even warmer. Highs of 33 to 34°C are likely around the Midlands and southern England. Northern areas will be slightly cooler but still warm, with mid-20s expected in parts of Scotland and low to mid-20s in Northern Ireland. READ MORE: Understanding tropical nights

How changing weather patterns are affecting UK wildlife

to the south coast, is now found in the Midlands, while the median wasp has spread from Sussex to northern England since its first UK sighting in 1980. The Met Office’s Biodiversity Working Group has played a role in supporting these changes by creating habitats at the Met Office for colonizing

Met Office Deep Dive: Heatwaves, marine anomalies and a satellite launch

in Scotland and Northern Ireland, have yet to meet the official threshold. A heatwave is defined as three consecutive days where temperatures exceed a location-specific threshold. In mid-June, large parts of Wales and central England met that criteria. More recently, the Midlands, southeast

What’s the pollen outlook this year?

of Worcester and lead author of the study, said: “Birch tree pollen is showing a trend for increasing severity, particularly in the Midlands region, but grass pollen is not showing an increase over time. Seasons for all pollen types are tending to start earlier and earlier but there is no evidence

mo-state-of-uk-climate-2016-v4.pdf

than 85%. The rainfall pattern was variable with the driest areas relative to average across southern England and Wales, Northern Ireland and Highland Scotland, and the wettest areas mainly across the north Midlands, parts of north-west and north-east England and eastern Scotland (Figure 18

factsheet_11-interpreting-weather-charts_2023.pdf

showing a deep area of low pressure with a central pressure value of 948 hPa to the west of Scotland. Wrapped around the low pressure centre is an occluded front with a cold front lying roughly from Lincolnshire across the Midlands and down to the West Country. The warm front is just clearing the east

barometer-issue-34.pdf

the forecast on student radio.” By the time he began an MSc in Applied Meteorology and Climatology at the University of Birmingham, Anthony knew he wanted to explore how the weather impacts everyday life. So, after adding a PhD in air quality, he joined the Met Office in 2001. Making a difference When working

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