HERE'S WHAT BRITAIN LOOKED LIKE FROM OUTER SPACE:
Parts of northern England and central Scotland have seen lows of (0F) -18C while the mercury has continued to drop in the south this week. But apart from a brief respite over the coming weekend, when temperatures are expected to climb slightly, the cold snap is likely to continue throughout Christmas and well into January, the Met Office warned yesterday.
The weather forecasters have suggested that if the temperature continues at this low level for the rest of the year, this December could replace 1981 as the coldest December since records began in 1910.
IOW: AGW = TFBS.
Updates: Prepare for the coldest December in 120 years, say weather experts
British Weather Services has echoed the Met Office's outlook for the Christmas week and said Arctic weather over Scandinavia and northern Russia will make inroads back into the north and east of the UK as early as Tuesday.
This puts this winter on course to be the coldest December since 1890 and one of the snowiest – vying with the Decembers of 1981 and 1878 for the title.
Jim Dale, senior risk meteorologist at British Weather Services said: "I am 90 per cent sure that we will see a Christmas fraught with harshness and hazards and the grip of winter could well hold us tight well into the new year."
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