Geffers
Linux enthusiast
- Joined
- 1 Jul 2021
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@Geffers that is substantial severe weather history in the UK of 1947. Thanks for sharing because I didn't know if the UK had any history of severe cold weather. I assumed Scotland and Northern Ireland would have some severe cold weather but learning the UK had that tragic winter puts a new light on the potential for severe winters in the UK.
@Retro as I was reading your weather article I was wondering if the UK had to be concerned with power loss and my question was answered in your article.
I hope you all stay safe and warm with this Arctic blast coming your way and there won't be any power cuts.
Our north eastern states are also expecting this same Arctic blast with blizzards expected. On the southern US map, we are expecting severely cold weather but not any storms. We hope to not have any power loss.
1963 was colder, and long. Started on Boxing Day (Dec 26th 1962) and lasted till March. Not as much snow but due to low temperatures it didn't melt.
1953 there was a storm, The devastating North Sea flood of 1953 caused catastrophic damage and loss of life in Scotland, England, Belgium and The Netherlands and became one of the worst peacetime disasters of the 20th century. 307 people died in England, 19 died in Scotland, 28 died in Belgium, 1,836 died in the Netherlands and a further 361 people died at sea.
Three nature events came together, high winds in the North Sea, a high Spring tide and a deep pressure system caused a surge of water from the open North Sea into a narrow water area between UK and mainland Europe. The East Coast of Southern UK and the Netherlands are both below sea level, hence the major flooding to both areas. Plus the surge came in the middle of the night when people were in bed, caught people unaware.
The devastating storm of 1953 - The History Press
Why was the devastating storm of 1953 so different and why did it cause so much loss of life?
thehistorypress.co.uk
Geffers