January
was England's wettest winter month in almost 250 years
Last
month's seasonal total was higher than any since 1767 and three times
the average level
1
February, 2014
The
deluge that has engulfed southern and central England in recent weeks
is the worst winter downpour in almost 250 years, according to
figures from the world's longest-running weather
station.
The
rainfall measured at the historic Radcliffe Meteorological Station at
Oxford University in January was greater than for any winter month
since daily recording began there in 1767, and three times the
average amount.
The
latest
Met Office data shows
that the region from Devon to Kent and up into the Midlands suffered
its wettest January since its records began in 1910.
But
Ian Ashpole, the Radcliffe Meteorological Observer, said: "The
Radcliffe measurements more than double the length of the Met Office
record and give us a better grip on how things are changing."
Flooding
has been identified as the most dangerous impact of climate
change
for the UK and is hitting harder and faster than expected, according
to scientists. Thousands of homes have been flooded since December,
and much of the low-lying Somerset Levels remains under water.
Ashpole
said: "The figures here are pretty representative of the broader
area as all the weather stations in the region have been recording
very high rainfall and the rain fronts have been coming in over broad
areas."
Oxford's
Radcliffe Observatory was
founded to assist astronomers,
but while the telescopes have now gone, the weather station has
continued its work and now has one of the longest-running series of
daily measurements in the world.
A
total of 146.9mm of rain fell in January, smashing the previous
record of 138.7mm in 1852. The new record is three times the average
recorded for the month over the last two and a half centuries. It was
also the wettest winter month – December, January or February –
ever recorded, beating December 1914, when 143.3mm fell.
In
addition, the 45-day period from 18 December saw more rain at
Radcliffe than for any such period in the observatory record. The
total of 231.28mm demolished the previous high of 209.4mm, which fell
from 1 December 1914.
But
Met Office forecaster Callum MacColl said the relentless series of
brutal storms showed no sign of letting up: "There will be more
wet and windy weather from the Atlantic this week. And the 15-day
outlook sees the unsettled theme very much continuing."
Andrew
Barrett, a storm expert at the University of Reading, said: "The
conditions are exactly right to bring wet weather across Britain.
There's effectively a storm factory over the Atlantic, caused by cold
polar air pressing up against warm, tropical air, causing weather
systems to form. These have then been steered across Britain by a
strong jet stream." Scientists are examining whether the melting
of the Arctic ice cap, due to global warming, has led the jet stream
to track further south, meaning more storms are channeled
across the UK.
On
Saturday, the Environment Agency had five severe flood warnings in
place, indicating a danger to life, in parts of the south-west and
the Midlands. There were also 156 standard flood warnings, meaning
flooding was expected and that immediate action was required, with
only the north-east region unaffected. The Met Office was also
warning
of severe weather
along the entire west coast of England and Wales, where very strong
winds were expected on Sunday, with the additional risk of large
waves over-topping sea walls.
I suspect, before that.
British
Isles in 2100
This
is the map of the British Isles in fictional 2100 rising sea level
scenario(to see map of entire Europe, follow this [link]).
After
global warming and rising of sea levelsharply escalated, sea level is
now 100 meters higher than it was in year 2000.
This
is the first regional map of the "World in 2100 series". In
this scenario, Scotland and Northern Ireland split from United
Kingdom(Northern Ireland joined Ireland). After sinking of London and
Dublin, Birmingham and Belfast have become new capitals of Britain
and Ireland
http://jaysimons.deviantart.com/art/British-Isles-in-2100-315945336
Excellent! Why you ask? We have been fighting, in more ways than one, to achieve a United Ireland! Excellent....... land mass loss aside a 32 County Ireland on or before 2100 will be progress! :)
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