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uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
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#1
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Data from February 1947
STORNOWAY Mean Max: 2.9 Mean Min: -1.8 Highest Max: 6.1 Lowest Min: -8.3 Air frosts: 22 Sunshine: 151% Rainfall: 11mm Days with lying snow: 25 ABERDEEN Mean Max: 0.7 Mean Min: -2.8 Highest Max: 3.9 Lowest Min: -11.1 Air frosts: 27 Sunshine: 56% Rainfall: 69mm Days with lying snow: 28 GLASGOW Mean Max: 1.4 Mean Min: -3.9 Highest Max: 5.0 Lowest Min: -11.7 Air frosts: 27 Sunshine: 106% Rainfall: 43mm Days with lying snow: 25 YORK Mean Max: 0.6 Mean Min: -2.7 Highest Max: 3.9 Lowest Min: -9.4 Air frosts: 26 Sunshine: 68% Rainfall: 49mm Days with lying snow: 28 MANCHESTER Mean Max: 1.0 Mean Min: -2.7 Highest Max: 3.9 Lowest Min: -10.0 Air frosts: 26 Sunshine: 41% Rainfall: 10mm Days with lying snow: 16 NOTTINGHAM Mean Max: 0.0 Mean Min: -3.4 Highest Max: 5.0 Lowest Min: -12.2 Air frosts: 28 Sunshine: 31% Rainfall: 45mm Days with lying snow: 28 BIRMINGHAM Mean Max: -0.9 Mean Min: -3.7 Highest Max: 4.4 Lowest Min: -8.9 Air frosts: 27 Sunshine: 29% Rainfall: 51mm Days with lying snow: 28 CARDIFF Mean Max: 0.4 Mean Min: -3.6 Highest Max: 6.7 Lowest Min: -9.4 Air frosts: 26 Sunshine: 36% Rainfall: 45mm Days with lying snow: 24 KEW Mean Max: 0.5 Mean Min: -2.7 Highest Max: 4.4 Lowest Min: -9.4 Air frosts: 25 Sunshine: 31% Rainfall: 30mm Days with lying snow: 26 BELFAST Mean Max: 1.6 Mean Min: -1.8 Highest Max: 3.3 Lowest Min: -7.2 Air frosts: 28 Sunshine: 87% Rainfall: 31mm Days with lying snow: 13 PLYMOUTH Mean Max: 2.8 Mean Min: -1.8 Highest Max: 8.9 Lowest Min: -8.9 Air frosts: 19 Sunshine: 87% Rainfall: 60mm Days with lying snow: 10 Source: TWO. My Comments: This is a good discussion topic. This month was the 2nd coldest of the 20th Century and as I have said before it changed the course of history due to its timing just after the war and the shocking hardship that is caused. Over half a million emigrated in the next 4 years and close on a million within 10 years - many cited the hardship caused by this. I was told this first hand when I lived in Australia in the late 1980s. Onto the figures it is curious to see that the mean max was above 0C in more places than I thought. The CET for this month was -1.9C the lowest recorded in ANY February. I would assume that when the temperature did get above 0C it was for only a very short time, say an hour or two in the day. This would have been insufficient to melt the large amounts of snow. Not surprisingly inland places such as Birmingham and Nottingham recorded max temps averaging 0C and Birmingham had a mean of -2.8C. I would attribute much of the extreme hardship of this month being attributed to heavy dependence on coal at the time and the frequent blizzards blocking roads which in those days had a fraction of the traffic on them compared to today. It was almost impossible to move coal. -- ************************************************** ********** Gavin Staples. Horseheath. Cambridge, UK. 93m ASL. www.gavinstaples.com site regularly updated "Often the hands will solve a mystery that the intellect has struggled with in vain". ~Carl G. Jung All outgoing emails are checked for viruses by Norton Internet Security 2005. ************************************************** ********** |
#2
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![]() "Gavin Staples" wrote in message ... Source: TWO. My Comments: This is a good discussion topic. This month was the 2nd coldest of the 20th Century and as I have said before it changed the course of history due to its timing just after the war and the shocking hardship that is caused. Over half a million emigrated in the next 4 years and close on a million within 10 years - many cited the hardship caused by this. I was told this first hand when I lived in Australia in the late 1980s. Onto the figures it is curious to see that the mean max was above 0C in more places than I thought. The CET for this month was -1.9C the lowest recorded in ANY February. I would assume that when the temperature did get above 0C it was for only a very short time, say an hour or two in the day. This would have been insufficient to melt the large amounts of snow. Not surprisingly inland places such as Birmingham and Nottingham recorded max temps averaging 0C and Birmingham had a mean of -2.8C. I would attribute much of the extreme hardship of this month being attributed to heavy dependence on coal at the time and the frequent blizzards blocking roads which in those days had a fraction of the traffic on them compared to today. It was almost impossible to move coal. -- ************************************************** ********** Gavin Staples. Horseheath. Cambridge, UK. 93m ASL. www.gavinstaples.com site regularly updated "Often the hands will solve a mystery that the intellect has struggled with in vain". ~Carl G. Jung All outgoing emails are checked for viruses by Norton Internet Security 2005. ************************************************** ********** Thanks Gavin for reminding me about some of the features about this month. One aspect which I don't remember being mentioned before was the effect of the snowy weather had on the football season which used to end at the very end of April with the Cup Final following on the first Saturday in May. In 1947 there were so many matches postponed in January and February that there was a full fixture list throughout May and the final few matches were played on 14 June when Sheffield Utd ( this was the last team to complete its Division 1 programme) were at home to Stoke City. I was a schoolboy during that winter and in southern England there were several partial thaws during February when some of the snow melted but within a day or two the frost and snow would return. I used to cycle to school most days and there weren't many cars on the road; also there wasn't much road gritting. My chief memory of this is that the roads became covered in rutted snow which, when the frost returned, froze solid so it became difficult to steer the bike along the frozen ruts. I seem to remember falling off quite often. My family lived about a mile or two from a gas works and people used to go there with prams and hand carts to queue for coke because of the coal shortage. In the following summer, to conserve electricity, double summertime was introduced. The clocks were put forward an hour in March and then put forward another hour a few weeks later. In June and July it stayed light until almost 11pm. in the south. Peter Clarke Ewell 55m ( but living in Teddington , Middx in 1947) PS. I can't end this without mentioning the glorious August of 1947 when I spent many hours at Lords cricket ground where I saw Denis Compton score several hundreds in a seemingly effortless and carefree way in front of huge crowds which was , and is, unforgettable. |
#3
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![]() "Gavin Staples" wrote in message ... Source: TWO. My Comments: This is a good discussion topic. This month was the 2nd coldest of the 20th Century and as I have said before it changed the course of history due to its timing just after the war and the shocking hardship that is caused. Over half a million emigrated in the next 4 years and close on a million within 10 years - many cited the hardship caused by this. I was told this first hand when I lived in Australia in the late 1980s. Onto the figures it is curious to see that the mean max was above 0C in more places than I thought. The CET for this month was -1.9C the lowest recorded in ANY February. I would assume that when the temperature did get above 0C it was for only a very short time, say an hour or two in the day. This would have been insufficient to melt the large amounts of snow. Not surprisingly inland places such as Birmingham and Nottingham recorded max temps averaging 0C and Birmingham had a mean of -2.8C. I would attribute much of the extreme hardship of this month being attributed to heavy dependence on coal at the time and the frequent blizzards blocking roads which in those days had a fraction of the traffic on them compared to today. It was almost impossible to move coal. -- ************************************************** ********** Gavin Staples. Horseheath. Cambridge, UK. 93m ASL. www.gavinstaples.com site regularly updated "Often the hands will solve a mystery that the intellect has struggled with in vain". ~Carl G. Jung All outgoing emails are checked for viruses by Norton Internet Security 2005. ************************************************** ********** Thanks Gavin for reminding me about some of the features about this month. One aspect which I don't remember being mentioned before was the effect of the snowy weather had on the football season which used to end at the very end of April with the Cup Final following on the first Saturday in May. In 1947 there were so many matches postponed in January and February that there was a full fixture list throughout May and the final few matches were played on 14 June when Sheffield Utd ( this was the last team to complete its Division 1 programme) were at home to Stoke City. I was a schoolboy during that winter and in southern England there were several partial thaws during February when some of the snow melted but within a day or two the frost and snow would return. I used to cycle to school most days and there weren't many cars on the road; also there wasn't much road gritting. My chief memory of this is that the roads became covered in rutted snow which, when the frost returned, froze solid so it became difficult to steer the bike along the frozen ruts. I seem to remember falling off quite often. My family lived about a mile or two from a gas works and people used to go there with prams and hand carts to queue for coke because of the coal shortage. In the following summer, to conserve electricity, double summertime was introduced. The clocks were put forward an hour in March and then put forward another hour a few weeks later. In June and July it stayed light until almost 11pm. in the south. Peter Clarke Ewell 55m ( but living in Teddington , Middx in 1947) PS. I can't end this without mentioning the glorious August of 1947 when I spent many hours at Lords cricket ground where I saw Denis Compton score several hundreds in a seemingly effortless and carefree way in front of huge crowds which was , and is, unforgettable. |
#4
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![]() "Gavin Staples" wrote in message ... Source: TWO. My Comments: This is a good discussion topic. This month was the 2nd coldest of the 20th Century and as I have said before it changed the course of history due to its timing just after the war and the shocking hardship that is caused. Over half a million emigrated in the next 4 years and close on a million within 10 years - many cited the hardship caused by this. I was told this first hand when I lived in Australia in the late 1980s. Onto the figures it is curious to see that the mean max was above 0C in more places than I thought. The CET for this month was -1.9C the lowest recorded in ANY February. I would assume that when the temperature did get above 0C it was for only a very short time, say an hour or two in the day. This would have been insufficient to melt the large amounts of snow. Not surprisingly inland places such as Birmingham and Nottingham recorded max temps averaging 0C and Birmingham had a mean of -2.8C. I would attribute much of the extreme hardship of this month being attributed to heavy dependence on coal at the time and the frequent blizzards blocking roads which in those days had a fraction of the traffic on them compared to today. It was almost impossible to move coal. -- ************************************************** ********** Gavin Staples. Horseheath. Cambridge, UK. 93m ASL. www.gavinstaples.com site regularly updated "Often the hands will solve a mystery that the intellect has struggled with in vain". ~Carl G. Jung All outgoing emails are checked for viruses by Norton Internet Security 2005. ************************************************** ********** Thanks Gavin for reminding me about some of the features about this month. One aspect which I don't remember being mentioned before was the effect of the snowy weather had on the football season which used to end at the very end of April with the Cup Final following on the first Saturday in May. In 1947 there were so many matches postponed in January and February that there was a full fixture list throughout May and the final few matches were played on 14 June when Sheffield Utd ( this was the last team to complete its Division 1 programme) were at home to Stoke City. I was a schoolboy during that winter and in southern England there were several partial thaws during February when some of the snow melted but within a day or two the frost and snow would return. I used to cycle to school most days and there weren't many cars on the road; also there wasn't much road gritting. My chief memory of this is that the roads became covered in rutted snow which, when the frost returned, froze solid so it became difficult to steer the bike along the frozen ruts. I seem to remember falling off quite often. My family lived about a mile or two from a gas works and people used to go there with prams and hand carts to queue for coke because of the coal shortage. In the following summer, to conserve electricity, double summertime was introduced. The clocks were put forward an hour in March and then put forward another hour a few weeks later. In June and July it stayed light until almost 11pm. in the south. Peter Clarke Ewell 55m ( but living in Teddington , Middx in 1947) PS. I can't end this without mentioning the glorious August of 1947 when I spent many hours at Lords cricket ground where I saw Denis Compton score several hundreds in a seemingly effortless and carefree way in front of huge crowds which was , and is, unforgettable. |
#5
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![]() "Gavin Staples" wrote in message ... Source: TWO. My Comments: This is a good discussion topic. This month was the 2nd coldest of the 20th Century and as I have said before it changed the course of history due to its timing just after the war and the shocking hardship that is caused. Over half a million emigrated in the next 4 years and close on a million within 10 years - many cited the hardship caused by this. I was told this first hand when I lived in Australia in the late 1980s. Onto the figures it is curious to see that the mean max was above 0C in more places than I thought. The CET for this month was -1.9C the lowest recorded in ANY February. I would assume that when the temperature did get above 0C it was for only a very short time, say an hour or two in the day. This would have been insufficient to melt the large amounts of snow. Not surprisingly inland places such as Birmingham and Nottingham recorded max temps averaging 0C and Birmingham had a mean of -2.8C. I would attribute much of the extreme hardship of this month being attributed to heavy dependence on coal at the time and the frequent blizzards blocking roads which in those days had a fraction of the traffic on them compared to today. It was almost impossible to move coal. -- ************************************************** ********** Gavin Staples. Horseheath. Cambridge, UK. 93m ASL. www.gavinstaples.com site regularly updated "Often the hands will solve a mystery that the intellect has struggled with in vain". ~Carl G. Jung All outgoing emails are checked for viruses by Norton Internet Security 2005. ************************************************** ********** Thanks Gavin for reminding me about some of the features about this month. One aspect which I don't remember being mentioned before was the effect of the snowy weather had on the football season which used to end at the very end of April with the Cup Final following on the first Saturday in May. In 1947 there were so many matches postponed in January and February that there was a full fixture list throughout May and the final few matches were played on 14 June when Sheffield Utd ( this was the last team to complete its Division 1 programme) were at home to Stoke City. I was a schoolboy during that winter and in southern England there were several partial thaws during February when some of the snow melted but within a day or two the frost and snow would return. I used to cycle to school most days and there weren't many cars on the road; also there wasn't much road gritting. My chief memory of this is that the roads became covered in rutted snow which, when the frost returned, froze solid so it became difficult to steer the bike along the frozen ruts. I seem to remember falling off quite often. My family lived about a mile or two from a gas works and people used to go there with prams and hand carts to queue for coke because of the coal shortage. In the following summer, to conserve electricity, double summertime was introduced. The clocks were put forward an hour in March and then put forward another hour a few weeks later. In June and July it stayed light until almost 11pm. in the south. Peter Clarke Ewell 55m ( but living in Teddington , Middx in 1947) PS. I can't end this without mentioning the glorious August of 1947 when I spent many hours at Lords cricket ground where I saw Denis Compton score several hundreds in a seemingly effortless and carefree way in front of huge crowds which was , and is, unforgettable. |
#6
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Gavin Staples wrote:
big snip I would assume that when the temperature did get above 0C it was for only a very short time, say an hour or two in the day. This would have been insufficient to melt the large amounts of snow. Look at www.winter1947.co.uk Firstly selecting the Charts Master Page and then following the daily sequence you will observe that there were several incursions of milder air which cleared, albeit temporarily, the lying snow from low lying southern areas. Selecting pages for snow depth and days of snow lying will confirm this. The front shown shown on the 10th February UK chart was significant as it marked the boundary between relatively milder conditions to the south and colder air to the north. This failed to reach N.Norolk hence the persistence of deep snow cover at low lying West Raynham. Otherwise the snow cover was deepest and most persistent over high ground in the Midlands, the North East, North Wales and Eastern Scotland. All the best -- George in Epping, West Essex (107m asl) www.eppingweather.co.uk www.winter1947.co.uk |
#7
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Gavin Staples wrote:
big snip I would assume that when the temperature did get above 0C it was for only a very short time, say an hour or two in the day. This would have been insufficient to melt the large amounts of snow. Look at www.winter1947.co.uk Firstly selecting the Charts Master Page and then following the daily sequence you will observe that there were several incursions of milder air which cleared, albeit temporarily, the lying snow from low lying southern areas. Selecting pages for snow depth and days of snow lying will confirm this. The front shown shown on the 10th February UK chart was significant as it marked the boundary between relatively milder conditions to the south and colder air to the north. This failed to reach N.Norolk hence the persistence of deep snow cover at low lying West Raynham. Otherwise the snow cover was deepest and most persistent over high ground in the Midlands, the North East, North Wales and Eastern Scotland. All the best -- George in Epping, West Essex (107m asl) www.eppingweather.co.uk www.winter1947.co.uk |
#8
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Gavin Staples wrote:
big snip I would assume that when the temperature did get above 0C it was for only a very short time, say an hour or two in the day. This would have been insufficient to melt the large amounts of snow. Look at www.winter1947.co.uk Firstly selecting the Charts Master Page and then following the daily sequence you will observe that there were several incursions of milder air which cleared, albeit temporarily, the lying snow from low lying southern areas. Selecting pages for snow depth and days of snow lying will confirm this. The front shown shown on the 10th February UK chart was significant as it marked the boundary between relatively milder conditions to the south and colder air to the north. This failed to reach N.Norolk hence the persistence of deep snow cover at low lying West Raynham. Otherwise the snow cover was deepest and most persistent over high ground in the Midlands, the North East, North Wales and Eastern Scotland. All the best -- George in Epping, West Essex (107m asl) www.eppingweather.co.uk www.winter1947.co.uk |
#9
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Gavin Staples wrote:
big snip I would assume that when the temperature did get above 0C it was for only a very short time, say an hour or two in the day. This would have been insufficient to melt the large amounts of snow. Look at www.winter1947.co.uk Firstly selecting the Charts Master Page and then following the daily sequence you will observe that there were several incursions of milder air which cleared, albeit temporarily, the lying snow from low lying southern areas. Selecting pages for snow depth and days of snow lying will confirm this. The front shown shown on the 10th February UK chart was significant as it marked the boundary between relatively milder conditions to the south and colder air to the north. This failed to reach N.Norolk hence the persistence of deep snow cover at low lying West Raynham. Otherwise the snow cover was deepest and most persistent over high ground in the Midlands, the North East, North Wales and Eastern Scotland. All the best -- George in Epping, West Essex (107m asl) www.eppingweather.co.uk www.winter1947.co.uk |
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