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| January 2003 monthly assessment
issued 3 February 2003 |
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Monthly summaries available for: England
and Wales | Scotland | Northern
Ireland
Homogenous time series based upon selected station data:
CET | England and Wales
rainfall
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| Sunny, mainly mild but significant
snow fell in second week and end of month. |
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Diary of highlights
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1st to 3rd Frequent spells of rain
as low pressure and associated fronts stalled then drifted
south, some outbreaks were thundery over southern counties.
Mild at first but wintry showers in north-east later. A
swollen Thames caused local flooding in the Chertsey/Weybridge
area on the 3rd.
4th to 6th Cold with sunny periods and some wintry
showers in east coast counties. There was overnight frost
and some substantial snow in east Kent later on the 6th.
7th to 10th An anticyclone to the north brought very
cold ENE winds, snow and widespread overnight frost. The
Thames at Oxford was reported as being the highest since
1947. The extreme south-east saw 2 to 5 cm of snow early
on the 7th which brought chaos during rush hour. More snow
on the 8th affected Greater London south to the M25, NW
Kent, Essex and parts of Surrey. Between 4 and 8 cm fell
in most places, with up to 12 cm in Essex. In central London
it was the heaviest since February 1991. Occasional wintry
showers later.
11th to 14th As the high slipped south the frost
and patchy freezing fog was displaced by mainly drier and
milder conditions. Redhil reached -9.9 °C on the 12th. Windy
later with some hill and coastal fog in the west.
15th to 17th A deep depression to the north, brought
changeable weather and sunny periods. Rain belts affected
the region on the 15th and 17th , with thunder in north-west
areas on the 17th and a gust of 72 knots at Capel Curig.
18th to 22nd Very wet in most places as complex low
pressure crossed the UK to the North Sea. There were frequent
outbreaks of rain and showers, some heavy with thunder,
becoming more scattered on the 22nd.
23rd to 27th Breezy but mostly dry with reasonable
sunny spells, although there was some rain in the north
on the 24th and 25th. An anticyclone to the south-west brought
very mild air to many places on the 26th and 27th, East
Malling in Kent reached 17.4 °C probably making it the warmest
January day in England on record.
28th to 31st Low pressure over the Baltic and high
pressure over the north Atlantic and Greenland fed progressively
colder air southwards. Snow showers on the 29th left significant
falls over Wales and parts of the south-west and central
southern England, some thunder was also reported. Later
during the 30th more substantial bands of snow affected
east coast counties, East Anglia, Essex, Bedfordshire and
Hertfordshire, giving between 5 and 12 cm in most places.
North and north-west suburbs of London also experienced
a period of heavy snow late afternoon and early evening.
There was major disruption and gridlock on motorways in
Essex and Hertfordshire; some tube networks were also affected.
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| Statistical details (using best available
data/estimates): updated November 2003 |
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England & Wales Mean Temperature Series (series
began in 1961). The final value for the month was 4.2 °C,
which is 0.8 °C above the 1961-1990 average, which is
in the above average category.
England & Wales Rainfall Series (series began
in 1961). The final total for the month was 86.1 mm, which
is 95 % of the 1961-1990 average, which is in the close
to average category.
England & Wales Sunshine Series (series began
in 1961). The final total for the month was 70.5 hours,
which is 145 % of the 1961-1990 average, which is in the
exceptionally average category. 2nd sunniest in series,
sunniest being 2001 with 74.3 hours.
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| Scotland |
| Cold and dry start, then unsettled and windy. |
| Diary of Highlights |
An anticyclonic spell in the first third of January gave
plenty of dry and clear weather with some very low temperatures.
Thereafter an unsettled regime prevailed, when deep lows
to the north and intense highs to the south gave a windy
spell of weather. On the 28th the central pressure of
an Atlantic anticyclone reached 1058 hPa, exceptionally
high for a mid-latitude, maritime location. The high pressure
was responsible for several surges of warm air reaching
Scotland in the second half of the month, with a record-breaking
temperature of 18.3 °C being recorded at Aboyne.
During the cold and dry spell that lasted from the 3rd
to the 11th, the lowest temperatures were experienced
on the 7th, when -18 °C was recorded at Aviemore. The
weather was often sunny, but there were snow showers in
the south-east on the 8th.
The cold spell was immediately followed by several days
(the 12th to the 16th) when warm sectors dominated, with
much rain in the West Highlands and the temperature reached
14 °C at Aberdeen. Polar air covered Scotland on the 15th,
but this was a day of westerly gales, with gusts of 79
m.p.h. at Lerwick and South Uist.
After a week of cyclonic and unsettled weather, warm sectors
returned on the 24th and 26th. Over 50 mm of rain was
recorded at Dalmally and Sloy on the 24th, and the 26th
was the day when the temperature reached 18.3 °C at Aboyne.
From the 27th onward, a cold northerly airstream covered
Scotland, bringing snow showers to the north and east.
There was severe drifting of snow in Aberdeen and Angus
on the 30th.
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Statistical details (using
best available data/estimates): updated November 2003
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Scotland Mean Temperature Series (series
began in 1961). The final value for the month was 2.7 °C,
which is 0.7 °C above the 1961-1990 average, which is
in the above average category.
Scotland Rainfall Series (series began in 1961).
The final total for the month was 169.5 mm, which is 109
% of the 1961-1990 average, which is in the close to average
category.
Scotland Sunshine Series (series began in 1961).
The final total for the month was 39.7 hours, which is 114
% of the 1961-1990 average, which is in the above average
category.
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| Northern
Ireland |
| An unsettled month but very Sunny. |
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Diary of Highlights
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The period from the 3rd to 11th was fairly
dry throughout the province, while the wettest days were
recorded on the 2nd, 16th, 19th and 28th. Many areas experienced
around half of the month in which little or no sunshine
was recorded, but despite this January recorded well above
average durations. Across Northern Ireland overall mean
temperatures were above normal, indeed the highest daytime
temperature of 16.1 °C for the month was recorded at Silent
Valley on the 26th which was the highest temperature ever
recorded for January in the province.
1st to 2nd The year started off dull and very wet. Moderate
and at times heavy rain, with some locally heavy downpours
occurred with some areas recording between 12 and 25 mm
of rainfall on each of the days. Temperatures were around
or slightly above normal.
3rd to 11th On the whole this was a fairly dry period
with some light showers occurring, producing only slight
amounts of rainfall throughout. Temperatures were mainly
below normal while widespread air and ground frosts were
recorded on most nights. This was one of the sunniest periods
of the month with some areas recording over six hours of
sunshine alone on each day between the 3rd and 5th. Little
or no sunshine was recorded on the 10th.
12th to 16th Over this period mainly dull but mild
conditions prevailed, with little or no sunshine recorded.
However the 15th was a sunny day in many places. It was
dry on most days, though widespread rain and showers occurring
on the 12th and 16th. South-westerly winds were mainly moderate
in strength over this period before backing to a southerly
direction and increasing to fresh in strength.
17th to 22nd An unsettled spell with a mixture of
moderate to heavy rain and showers moving across the Country
from the south accompanied with some sunny periods. The
highest rainfalls occurred on the 18th and 19th with some
areas recording over 25 mm of rainfall over these two days
alone.
23rd to 27th A very mild period throughout, with the
highest daytime temperatures ever recorded in January occurring
on the 26th. The 23rd and 26th were fairly dry, however
bands of rain and showers tracked across the province from
the south-west to give some moderate to heavy falls on the
24th, 25th and 27th.
28th to 31st A northerly airflow dominated and brought
cold unsettled conditions across the province with strong
to near gale force winds in places. Wintry precipitation
was widespread on the 30th and 31st.
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Statistical details (using
best available data/estimates): updated November 2003
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Northern Ireland Mean Temperature Series (series
began in 1961). The final value for the month was 4.2 °C,
which is 0.5 °C above the 1961-1990 average, which is
in the close to average category.
Northern Ireland Rainfall Series (series began in
1961). The final total for the month was 108.1 mm, which
is 93 % of the 1961-1990 average, which is in the close
to average category.
Northern Ireland Sunshine Series (series began in
1961). The final total for the month was 56.8 hours, which
is 130 % of the 1961-1990 average, which is in the exceptionally
average category.
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Homogeneous series based upon selected station data |
| Updated November 2003 |
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Central England Temperature (series begins in 1659).
The mean value for the month was 4.5 °C which is 0.7 °C
above the 1961-90 normal of 3.8 °C and is in the above average
category. Others:- 2002/5.5, 2001/3.2 2000/4.9, 1999/5.5,
1998/5.2, 1997/2.5, 1993/5.9 °C.
England and Wales Rainfall (series begins in 1766).
The total for the month was 91.2 mm, which is 100 % of the
1961-90 average and is in the close to average category.
Others:- 2002/86.9, 2001/84.4, 2000/46.4, 1999/128.6, 1998/120.4,
1997/16.5 mm.
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| Note: Diary values are provisional based
on data available at the time. |
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