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NCIC Monthly Summary

, and all areas were cloudy by late afternoon but much milder too with Nantwich Reaseheath Hall (Cheshire) recording a maximum of 17.6 °C. St Mary’s (Scilly) fell no lower than 12.9 °C early on the 10th, then it was dull and damp, with rain and drizzle in the north moving slowly southwards, and mist, fog

NCIC Monthly Summary

, and West St station was closed due to flooding. There was flooding in some parts of Belfast, with reports of property flooding in the Ardoyne area. Strong winds brought down trees causing delays on the A127 in Essex, and reportedly delayed rail services between Lowestoft and Ipswich. Further flooding

Microsoft Word - Jan2021_fulldocument_v1.docx

counties, it turned very wet from the south-west on the 19th with a slow-moving band of rain, giving 123.8 mm at Honister Pass (Cumbria). It turned much milder, with Scilly St Mary’s and Westonzoyland (Somerset) not falling below 10.3 °C overnight into the 20th. The 20th was another wet day, the rain

NCIC Monthly Summary

flooding in Cumbria, Blackpool and the Midlands. Flooding affected the east and south-east of England too, especially St Albans, Suffolk and the M25. Between the 19th and 21st, there were impacts from Storm Ellen. In Northern Ireland there was flooding, fallen trees, the Foyle Bridge was closed

leaderpack_1-3-update.pdf

into the long edge of the cork at right angles to each other. Step 4: Cut out four small squares of card and label with the four main points of the compass; N, E, S, W. Attach these to the end of each matchstick with Blu-tack. Step 6: Fill the bottle with sand (or pebbles or something else to weigh

james_tappin-on_the_importance_of_polarisation.pdf

ON THE IMPORTANCE OF POLARIZATION IN HELIOSPHERIC IMAGERS S. J. Tappin RAL Space Introduction ● ● ● Heliospheric imagers, have been shown to be a powerful tool for tracking CMEs (and other solar wind structures) through the heliosphere. Hitherto they have only detected total intensity. Coronagraphs

nma_reference_scheme.pdf

/2/4/2/2/a DAR MET/2/4/2/2/b International MET/2/4/2/3 Charts MET/2/4/2/3/a Ice MET/2/4/2/3/b Sea Surface Temperature MET/2/4/2/3/c Wave/Swell MET/2/4/2/3/d N Atlantic Synoptic Working Charts MET/2/4/2/3/e British Isles MET/2/4/2/3/f Upper Air MET/2/4/2/3/g S. Hemisphere MET/2/4/2/3/h N. Hemisphere

Malcolm_Roberts_ppt.pptx

patterns of change • In the last few years it has become clear that historic trend patterns sit outside the CMIP ensemble • remember the CMIP ensemble contains 100’s of ensemble members from ~40 models for 1850-present day • hence CMIP is not representing uncertainty in present-day variability

News

2019 record temperatures conclude a decade of records

as the average temperature increases cold extremes currently can and do still occur, for example the ’Beast from the East’ in 2018 resulted in the coldest March day on record with a maximum of -4.7 °C recorded at Tredegar in South Wales. However, during the 2010’s these occurrences have been outnumbered

News

2023: The warmest year on record globally

-breaking year for global average temperature. But last year’s global temperature was 0.5 °C warmer than 1998, providing further evidence that our planet is warming on average by 0.2 °C per decade. “At the current rate of human-induced warming, 2023’s record-breaking values will in time be considered

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