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UK weather maps show exact date 300-mile storm batters everywhere from Devon to Norfolk | UK | News

The UK can be beaten with a 300 -mile storm extending from Devon to the Norfolk coast, and the new air maps are intense rains showing Southern England by multiplying Southern England in the early hours of Tuesday, August 26th. WX Graphics Show red, orange, yellow and deep blue terrible colors throughout the nationwide, proposing widespread and heavy torrential rainfall.

The worst of the weather is expected during the night, it rained almost all south of England. The WX graphic map, which is valid for midnight, shows a powerful rain group that sweeps along a large strip from London and Southampton to South Wales. Bright red zones show close to 10 mm precipitation per hour in some regions, while most of the Southern England is in consistent heavy rain.

Until 6 am, the storm system starts to move north. The areas between Birmingham and Manchester appear to be the worst affected as orange and yellow colors settle in the area.

The areas just below Manchester are covered with dark blue colors on a map with a rainfall of approximately 1 mm per hour, and heavy showers continue to fall in the middle regions of England.

Further south, the rain begins to slightly alleviate. Most of the London, Cardiff and Southeast look dry in the early hours of the morning, but the scattered showers remain in the regions of East Anglia and the Western Country.

The map, which applies to 12noon, indicates a significant weakening of the system. In some places, while slight rain continues, the density decreases sharply and only a handful of areas are affected.

The colors disappear from red and orange to pale blue, which shows lighter rains of about 0.2 to 1 mm per hour.

According to WX graphics data, it extends about 300 miles to the Norfolk coast in the storm Devon, and covers districts such as Hampshire, Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire, London, Hertfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Norfolk.

Met Office’s long -range prediction in the case of a long -range hurricane, a deep low pressure area may be behind this wet and restless air spell.

The estimation is valid between 23 August and September 1: “It is likely to develop a deep low pressure area in the North Atlantic.

“This is linked to the hurricane of the Erin, who is expected to bring a change in weather conditions to the UK, but the timing of this is uncertain.”

Met Office, from the beginning of the week from the beginning of the week, as low -pressure systems pass through the Atlantic, the high pressure can be “more and more wear from the west,” he says.

It is likely that temperatures will start “hot or too hot before it is prone to average.

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