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: http://star.arm.ac.uk/press/2015/Weather_Dec14_pr.html
Дата изменения: Mon Jan 5 14:17:10 2015 Дата индексирования: Sun Apr 10 04:49:08 2016 Кодировка: IBM-866 Поисковые слова: millennium |
Armagh Observatory reports that December 2014 was cold and wet, but sunnier than average.
The mean monthly temperature was 4.5 degrees Celsius (40.1 degrees Fahrenheit), approximately 0.1 degrees C cooler than the long-term (1796тАУ2010) average December temperature at Armagh and more than 0.4 degrees C cooler than the most recent 30-year (1981тАУ2010) December average.
The warmest day (highest maximum air temperature) was 12.4 C on the 18th, and the coolest night (lowest minimum air temperature) was тАУ5.1 degrees C on the 29th. This was the coldest night at Armagh for 21 months, that is, since the very cold 12th March 2013, and the coldest December night for two years. There were 12 nights with air frost and 25 with ground frost.
Total precipitation amounted to 98.95 mm (nearly 3.9 inches), approximately 28 per cent more than the average December rainfall at Armagh, which is roughly 77 mm. The wettest day was the 10th, with 15.2 mm (0.6 inches), though there were two other days (the 23rd and 16th) each with around half an inch of rain, and just one day (the 2nd) with no recorded precipitation at all.
Despite the cool, wet weather, December 2014 was brighter than average with a total of approximately 53.2 hours of strong sunshine. This is some 30 per cent more than the December average at Armagh, making December 2014 the 10th sunniest December on record, shared with December 1893. The sunniest day was the 2nd, with 6.5 hours of strong sunshine.
Taking the year as a whole, 2014 can be described as wetter and warmer than average with about average sunshine, though this masks large in-year variations.
The mean annual temperature was 10.16 degrees C, nearly half a degree warmer than the most recent 30-year (1981тАУ2010) annual average temperature at Armagh and more than one degree C warmer than the corresponding long-term (1796тАУ2010) annual average. 2014 was the warmest year at Armagh since 2011, and the 14th warmest on record, continuing the trend of relatively warm years during the past decade or so.
Total precipitation during 2014 was 957.85mm (approximately 37.7 inches), making 2014 the wettest at Armagh for 12 years, that is since 2002, and the fifteen wettest year at Armagh since rainfall records began in 1838.
The total number of hours of strong sunshine was 1249.0. This is approximately 8 per cent less than the long-term (1881тАУ2010) annual average but close to the most recent (1981тАУ2010) annual average of 1247.0 hours.
These data refer to observations at Armagh Observatory, which has been recording the weather at Armagh since 1795.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT: Mark Bailey at the Armagh Observatory, College Hill, Armagh, BT61 9DG. Tel.: 028-3752-2928; FAX: 028-3752-7174; mebarm.ac.uk.
NOTES FOR EDITORS:
The following monthly summary illustrates the month-to-month variability of the weather at Armagh during 2014:
January (wettest since 2008);
February (wettest since 2002, sunniest since 2008);
March (slightly warmer and slightly duller than average);
April (exceptionally warm, the third warmest April at Armagh since daily temperature measurements at Armagh Observatory began in December 1794);
May (exceptionally dull, the dullest May for at least 129 years, the warmest May since 2008);
June (driest since 2006 and much warmer than average);
July (drier and warmer than average);
August (coldest for 20 years, with the night of 23/24 August the coldest August night ever recorded at Armagh; wettest August since 2008);
September (driest for 120 years, the second driest September on record at Armagh);
October (wetter and warmer than average, the warmest Halloween day on record, that is since at least October 1843); and
November (much wetter than average, the fifth wettest November at Armagh since daily rainfall records began in 1838).
The appended graphs show the run of mean annual Temperature, Rainfall and Sunshine at Armagh over the 130-220 years since Armagh Observatory began recording such data on a daily basis.
Last Revised: 2015 January 5th |