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Hot weather forecast as maps show exact date 4-day heatwave sparks 37C scorcher | Weather | News

Some parts of the UK will be boiled as temperatures rise to 37C within a few weeks. The Southeastern regions will record the highest increase in Mercury from Saturday, August 9 to August 12 to 12 August, because the heat wave conditions sweep the country for the fourth time this summer. The air maps from WXCharts and Netweather show the 27C and the Galli border near Oxford on August 9th, climbing to 34C in some regions on August 10, and peaked at Nottingham and Leicester in Eastern Midlands on August 11th.

The above average temperatures up to 27C, especially until August 12, will continue in Southeast England and potentially meets a heat wave criteria of Met Office – a period of at least three days in which the daily temperature exceeds a regional threshold. Although the northern part of the UK is less likely to have the highest level of 40C next month, it can be adjusted to temperatures above the 23C average of Scotland, and Newcastle and Middlesbrough can be saved up to 27C.

Ireland will also record temperatures up to 25C on August 10, and Mercury fires up to 34C in Wales and the hottest weather expected in the southwest of the country in Pembrokeshire.

The hot air patterni also seems to affect the southern regions along the coast after passing through the European mainland, which will be fried with approximately 40 ° C temperatures.

High pressure jet streams from the continent have started three different heat waves this summer so far, and the temperatures went to the top at 25.8c at Faversham on July 1.

Storms and flash floods throughout the country and conditions, conditions made a more turbulent turn – but August, traditionally, the Second Most Water of England can return to a return for seasonal air.

Met Office’s long -range prediction, which covers the first week of August, predicts that the high pressure in the southwest and the East will continue at the beginning of the next month.

Scotland and Northern Ireland initially live “restless and conditions and airy winds”, sunny and dry air, as the moon continues and “high pressure to the south -to -country will become widespread when it extends throughout the country.

BBC Weather says that in early August, the temperatures will be “on the average or even above average” and can show the return to “more calm and more calm” spells in the UK, and “the northern and distant north-west Europe” can be verified later.

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