Strange Weather Facts


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Weather Extremes

The highest temperature ever recorded was 58 degrees centigrade at Al'Aziziyah in Libya, on 13th Sept, 1922

The biggest hail stones fell on Bangladesh on 14th April, 1986. Each weighed over 1kg.and 92 people are reported to have been killed.

The wettest place on earth is Mawsynram in India. 11,873mm falls each year.

The driest place is Antofagasta in Chile. where average rainfall is less than 0.1mm. Several years have had no rainfall at all.

The windiest place is Commonwealth Bay, Antarctica where winds of 200mph have been recorded.

Roy Sullivan of Virginia, USA has been struck by lightning 7 times.

Sunniest place - Yuma, Arizona has over 4,000 hours per year (the sun shines for 90% of the total possible time each year).

Least sunshine - the South Pole has no sun for 182 days every year.

Most rainfall in one hour - 38.1mm fell on 26th November, 1970 at Barst on Guadeloupe in the Caribbean.

Greatest recorded wind speed - 371kph at Mt Washington, New Hampshire, USA.

Highest waterspout - 1,528m at Eden, New Souh Wales in Australia.

Greatest Snowfall - 31.1metres during 1972 on Mt Rainier, Washington State, USA.

Longest lasting rainbow - 3 hours on 14 August, 1979 on the coast of Gwynedd, North Wales.


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Weird Weather

by Paul Simons. Published by Little Brown at £15.99


Britain has had more than its fair share of strange phenomena when it comes to the weather, according to Paul Simons, a writer on climatic conditions.

These have ranged from showers of fish and frogs and bangs in the night, to exceptional storms and periods of drought, he says in his book detailing 16 years of research.

Frogs fell on Sutton Coldfield in 1954 and on Trowbridge, Wilts, in 1938. Tadpoles dropped on Chippenham town centre in 1983, and small flounder and Dover sole fell in east London in May 1984. "Tornadoes might explain these showers," he writes.

"Tornadoes can suck up objects into their funnels and carry them for miles in thunderclouds, eventually seeing them fall out in heavy rain."

Britain gets several tornadoes each year, he writes. One of the worst hit west London on Dec 8th, 1954, ripping through Chiswick, Gunnersbury, Acton, Golders Green and Southgate.

"An eyewitness described seeing a car 'flying by at 5 metres in the air before landing upright without even bursting a tyre'."

The year 1979 was a year for waterspouts. Picnickers by lakes near Reigate, Surrey, reported watching "as a freak whirlwind struck, spinning water into the air and making a loud roaring noise."

On May 11, 1979, a waterspout was seen off the coast of Mablethorpe, Lincs. Gaynor Kirkby said:"It was like steam rising off a boiling sea, and travelled parallel to the coast before veering out to sea and disappearing."

In the early hours of July 1, 1968, a remarkable shower of red sand fell over southern England and the Midlands "which turned out to be Saharan sand carried up in sandstorms and carried to Britain on a low pressure system that sent temperatures up to 32°C."

In February 1977 a rushing noise followed by a massive explosion and blue-green flash rocked the village of Ford in Wiltshire, "possibly the result of a powerful form of ball lightning".

Mr Simons concludes: "The record drought last year appears to be part of global warming, with European summers turning hotter and Kent getting the most thunderstorms in the UK.

"Now as the sea levels are rising because the climate is growing warmer, the chances of a flood breaching the Thames barrier are growing by the year."


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