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2013–2014 Atlantic winter storms in Europe

2013–2014 Atlantic winter storms in Europe were a series of winter storms affecting areas of Atlantic Europe and beyond. The French Atlantic coastal regions (chiefly Brittany), South West and Southern England, West Wales, Ireland, Spanish Atlantic coastal regions (particularly Galicia) were especially affected by a "conveyor belt" series of high-precipitation storms (mostly not exceptional for their winds) and by high tides. Many storms were explosively deepened by a strong jet stream, many deepening below 950 hPa. The repeated formation of large deep lows over the Atlantic brought storm surges and large waves which coincided with some of the highest astronomical tides of the year and caused coastal damage. The low pressure areas brought heavy rainfalls which led to flooding, which became most severe over parts of England such as at the Somerset Levels. The repeated storms fit into a pattern of disturbed weather in the Northern Hemisphere, which saw from November 2013 a disturbance to the jet stream in the western Pacific, which propagated eastwards bringing a warm winter to Alaska, drought to California, and repeated cold air outbreaks to the eastern USA where the early 2014 North American cold wave resulted.

2013–2014 Atlantic winter storms in Europe
NOAA North Atlantic wind speed anomaly January–February 2014
TypeExtratropical cyclones
European windstorms
2013–2014 Atlantic winter storms in Europe
1Strongest storm is determined by lowest pressure and maximum recorded non-mountainous wind gust is also included for reference.
2015-2016 (British Isles) →

Autumn 2013

The end of October brought the St. Jude storm, ranked within the top 10 most severe storms in the autumn across southern England in the last 40 years.[1] following the St. Jude storm a series of low pressure systems swept across western Europe bringing winds and rain, though not developing anywhere near as deeply as the St. Jude storm. A low named Godehard[Note 1] was the strongest of these low pressure areas and brought some disruption to Wales, with a gust of 89 mph (143 km/h) recorded at Mumbles.[2] Storm-force winds left 10,000 homes without electricity in Wales on the first weekend of November 2013.[2] On 2 November the M4 Motorway was closed between Margam and Pyle due to the weather, and a roof canopy at the Princess of Wales Hospital Bridgend was damaged.[2] The old Severn Bridge on the M48 motorway was closed, with speed restrictions in place on the Second Severn Crossing. The M4 at Briton Ferry – where the motorway crosses the Neath – also saw speed restrictions and the Britannia Bridge to Anglesey and the Cleddau Bridge in Pembrokeshire also saw speed restrictions enacted. Natural Resources Wales warned of localised flooding with sea spray and overtopping of sea defences along the Pembrokeshire, Ceredigion and Newport coasts.[2] The low pressure also brought large waves to Aberystwyth which caused some disruption to seafront properties.[3]

November/December 2013

Late November and early December saw an area of high pressure positioned to the west of Britain and Ireland, this directed the westerly path of weather systems moving over the Atlantic to the north of the UK, along which the storms developed before impacting across the Nordic countries. Lows moving to the north of the United Kingdom meant that November was fairly dry for the country.[1] December saw long periods of calm conditions in France also with dry and sunny weather predominating. A change in the weather regime began as active depressions brought strong rain and snowfall to the mountains towards the month end. Until 13 December, France (and UK and Ireland) were protected by a powerful anticyclone stretched from the Maghreb to the British Isles, which deflected the Atlantic storm track north into Scandinavia.[4] The Nordic nations were affected by a series of storms, including Hilde (17 November),[5] Oskari (1 dec),[6] Xaver (5–7 Dec), Ivar (12 Dec)[5] and Zaki and Adam (14–15 Dec). Cyclone Xaver is predominantly known for the North sea storm surge of 5 December in the UK. The high pressure over Britain, Ireland and the Atlantic moved east during mid December, opening the way for areas of low pressure to reach western Europe. During mid-December a strong temperature gradient established over eastern North America (temperatures in New York 21 °C [70 °F], Montreal −7 °C [19 °F]), which enhanced the jetstream in the North Atlantic.[7][8] The lows moved under this powerful jet stream where they explosively deepened before reaching Western Europe.[9]

Christmas and New Year storms

Bernd (18–19 December)

Bernd
 
Formed17 December 2013
Dissipated21 December 2013
Lowest pressure947 hPa (28.0 inHg)[10]

The first storm of this period was named Bernd,[Note 1] it was also given the name Emily after Emily Brontë the author, who died on 19 December 165 years ago, and who wrote Wuthering Heights which featured constant stormy weather by some press.[11][12][13] Met Éireann issued red warnings for wind at 9:00am 18 December to Donegal, Galway, Leitrim, Mayo and Sligo.[13] The UK Met Office issued orange warnings for the Highlands, Western Isles, Strathclyde and Northern Ireland.[14]

Dirk (23–24 December)

Dirk
 
Formed21 December 2013
Dissipated28 December 2013
Lowest pressure927 hPa (27.4 inHg)

Dirk formed over North America,[16] some storminess was associated with the low in Canada, before it moved into the Atlantic. The preceding weather in North America saw a steep temperature gradient (temperatures in New York 21 °C [70 °F], Montreal −7 °C [19 °F]) which enhanced the jetstream in the North Atlantic.[8] The low moved under this powerful jet stream where it explosively deepened before reaching Western Europe.[16][9]

Deepening below 935 hPa (27.6 inHg) is considered uncommon in the North Atlantic, but has been recorded on a number of occasions, measured from ships transiting the ocean and from land based-recording stations.[17] Offshore the minimum low pressure of the "Dirk" storm was forecast to reach a low of 927 hPa (27.4 inHg).[18][19]

On land the low pressure during the storm was measured at 936.8 hPa (27.66 inHg) on 24 December at Stornoway, Isle of Lewis off the north west coast of Scotland.[20][21] This the lowest measured in Britain and Ireland since 1886 (127 years), when a low of 931.2 hPa (27.50 inHg) was recorded in Belfast, Northern Ireland.[20] The most recent low pressure record near such values in Stornoway was measured on 20 December 1982 at 937.6 hPa (27.69 inHg).[20] The all-time low pressure record for the British Isles remains at 925.4 hPa (27.33 inHg), recorded at Ochtertyre, Crieff in Perthshire on 26 January 1884.[20]

At the southernmost tip of the Faroe Islands a low air pressure of 932.2 hPa was recorded on Christmas Eve at Akraberg lighthouse.[22] This was not as low as the Faroese record of 930.3 hPa (27.47 inHg), set at Vagar airport during the passage of the Braer Storm of January 1993.[22]

Erich (26–27 December)

Erich
 
Formed25 December 2013
Dissipated1 January 2014
Lowest pressure944 hPa (27.9 inHg)
 
High waves at Porthcawl 27 December

Felix & Gerhard

 
Lows Felix II 966 hPa, Gerhard 970 hPa and Anne 993 hPa, on 1 January 2014

A stormy period between Christmas and New Year followed as Weather fronts associated with the lows Felix (30 December) and Gerhard (1 January) passed over the UK which brought further rainfall and some stormy conditions.

The Felix low was more remote from European mainland and brought strong tightening of isobars across NW France, where winds of 141 km/h (88 mph) were reported in Camaret-sur-Mer, Brittany. Low near Iceland brought winds up to 140 km/h (87 mph) to that country, and disrupted traffic and heavy rainfall and brought more flooding to the United Kingdom.[24] At Croyde Bay in north Devon a woman was rescued from sea who later died on 31 December.[25]

27-year-old man swept out to sea on Loe Bar Porthleven Cornwall New Year's Eve, and on 1 January a man was found dead on the banks of River Torridge in Bideford, Devon.[26] Over the holiday period, several New Year outdoor swimming events were cancelled.[citation needed]

Notes

  1. ^ Naming conventions (where possible) follow those adopted by the Free University of Berlin's adopt a vortex scheme. Names from other sources referenced in article.

References

  1. ^ a b "2013: Average figures mask some notable highlights". Met Office News Blog. 31 December 2013. Retrieved 9 February 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d "Storm-force winds bring damage and 10,000 homes lose power". BBC News. 3 November 2013. Retrieved 11 November 2013.
  3. ^ "Aberystwyth seafront like 'war zone' after storm waves". BBC News. 4 November 2013. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  4. ^ "BILAN DÉCEMBRE 2013 : grand calme avant les tempêtes, de la douceur". Meteo-Paris.com (in French). 30 December 2013. Retrieved 29 March 2014.
  5. ^ a b "Norske ekstremvær får navn" (in Norwegian). Norwegian Meteorological Institute. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
  6. ^ "2013 – an exceptionally warm year". Finnish Meteorological Institute. 3 January 2014. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
  7. ^ Burt, Stephen (March 2014). "Britain's lowest barometric pressure since 1886". Weather. 69 (3): 79–81. Bibcode:2014Wthr...69...79B. doi:10.1002/wea.2285.
  8. ^ a b Hammond, John (24 December 2013). "Why is it so stormy?". Weather BBC News. Retrieved 24 December 2013.
  9. ^ a b Taylor, Matt. "UK stormy weather explained". BBC News. Retrieved 24 December 2013.
  10. ^ "December 19, 2013 surface analysis". Met Office. Retrieved 26 December 2013.
  11. ^ Rao, Nathan (18 December 2013). "Hold on to your hats! 100mph Storm Emily will roar in tonight with 'a sting in her tail'". Daily Express. Retrieved 9 February 2014.
  12. ^ "Christmas will be a washout as storms continue". AOL Travel. 19 December 2013. Retrieved 19 December 2013.
  13. ^ a b Cromie, Claire (18 December 2014). "Storm Emily's 80mph winds could disrupt Northern Ireland power supplies and transport again". Belfast Telegraph. Retrieved 18 March 2014.
  14. ^ "Storm Emily: Met Office Upgrade Weather Warning To Amber For Scotland And Northern Ireland". Weather Forecast blog. 18 December 2013. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  15. ^ a b "Updated Wind and Rainfall totals for 18th to 19th December". Met Office. 19 December 2014. Retrieved 18 March 2014.
  16. ^ a b Saary, Elizabeth (23 December 2013). "UK Stormy weather to last 48 hours". BBC News. Retrieved 23 December 2013.
  17. ^ Burt, S. D. (February 1987). "A new North Aatlantic low pressure record". Weather. 42 (2): 53–56. Bibcode:1987Wthr...42...53B. doi:10.1002/j.1477-8696.1987.tb06919.x.
  18. ^ "Analysis 24/12/2013". NOAA. Archived from the original on 9 February 2014. Retrieved 9 February 2014.
  19. ^ "Winter storms, December 2013 to January 2014". Met Office. 12 February 2014. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
  20. ^ a b c d Graham, Eddie (24 December 2013). "Lowest pressure for 127 years recorded in Stornoway today (Confirmed) + Storm Videos". UHI-Mahara. Retrieved 25 December 2013.
  21. ^ . Stornoway Gazette. 23 December 2013. Archived from the original on 26 December 2013. Retrieved 25 December 2013.
  22. ^ a b "Dramatiskt julväder i Sverige och övriga Europa". Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (in Swedish). 27 December 2013. Retrieved 7 January 2014.
  23. ^ a b "Wind and rainfall data 27 December 2013". Met Office. 27 December 2013. Retrieved 22 March 2014.
  24. ^ "Dépression Felix : coup de vent en Bretagne et Normandie". Meteo-Paris.com (in French). 30 December 2013. Retrieved 29 March 2014.
  25. ^ "Devon: Woman Dies After Being Swept Out To Sea". Sky News. 31 December 2014. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  26. ^ Keeble, Andy (1 January 2014). "Body of man discovered on banks of River Torridge". North Devon Gazette. Retrieved 15 March 2014.

External links

  • House of Commons Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee Winter floods 2013–14
  • Met Office and Centre for Ecology and Hydrology: The Recent Storms and Floods in the UK, 9 February 2014.
  • Met Office: Marine weather analysis - December 2013 & January 2014
  • Environment Agency report
  • Environment Agency Flickr Galleries:
  • St Jude's day storm
  • December 2013 East Coast Surge
  • Tidal Surge recovery December 2013
  • December 2013 flooding
  • January 2014 flooding
  • February 2014 flooding

2013, 2014, atlantic, winter, storms, europe, were, series, winter, storms, affecting, areas, atlantic, europe, beyond, french, atlantic, coastal, regions, chiefly, brittany, south, west, southern, england, west, wales, ireland, spanish, atlantic, coastal, reg. 2013 2014 Atlantic winter storms in Europe were a series of winter storms affecting areas of Atlantic Europe and beyond The French Atlantic coastal regions chiefly Brittany South West and Southern England West Wales Ireland Spanish Atlantic coastal regions particularly Galicia were especially affected by a conveyor belt series of high precipitation storms mostly not exceptional for their winds and by high tides Many storms were explosively deepened by a strong jet stream many deepening below 950 hPa The repeated formation of large deep lows over the Atlantic brought storm surges and large waves which coincided with some of the highest astronomical tides of the year and caused coastal damage The low pressure areas brought heavy rainfalls which led to flooding which became most severe over parts of England such as at the Somerset Levels The repeated storms fit into a pattern of disturbed weather in the Northern Hemisphere which saw from November 2013 a disturbance to the jet stream in the western Pacific which propagated eastwards bringing a warm winter to Alaska drought to California and repeated cold air outbreaks to the eastern USA where the early 2014 North American cold wave resulted 2013 2014 Atlantic winter storms in EuropeNOAA North Atlantic wind speed anomaly January February 2014TypeExtratropical cyclones European windstorms2013 2014 Atlantic winter storms in Europe1Strongest storm is determined by lowest pressure and maximum recorded non mountainous wind gust is also included for reference 2015 2016 British Isles Contents 1 Autumn 2013 2 November December 2013 3 Christmas and New Year storms 3 1 Bernd 18 19 December 3 2 Dirk 23 24 December 3 3 Erich 26 27 December 3 4 Felix amp Gerhard 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksAutumn 2013 EditThe end of October brought the St Jude storm ranked within the top 10 most severe storms in the autumn across southern England in the last 40 years 1 following the St Jude storm a series of low pressure systems swept across western Europe bringing winds and rain though not developing anywhere near as deeply as the St Jude storm A low named Godehard Note 1 was the strongest of these low pressure areas and brought some disruption to Wales with a gust of 89 mph 143 km h recorded at Mumbles 2 Storm force winds left 10 000 homes without electricity in Wales on the first weekend of November 2013 2 On 2 November the M4 Motorway was closed between Margam and Pyle due to the weather and a roof canopy at the Princess of Wales Hospital Bridgend was damaged 2 The old Severn Bridge on the M48 motorway was closed with speed restrictions in place on the Second Severn Crossing The M4 at Briton Ferry where the motorway crosses the Neath also saw speed restrictions and the Britannia Bridge to Anglesey and the Cleddau Bridge in Pembrokeshire also saw speed restrictions enacted Natural Resources Wales warned of localised flooding with sea spray and overtopping of sea defences along the Pembrokeshire Ceredigion and Newport coasts 2 The low pressure also brought large waves to Aberystwyth which caused some disruption to seafront properties 3 November December 2013 EditMain articles 2013 Nordic storms and Xaver 2013 North Sea tidal surge Late November and early December saw an area of high pressure positioned to the west of Britain and Ireland this directed the westerly path of weather systems moving over the Atlantic to the north of the UK along which the storms developed before impacting across the Nordic countries Lows moving to the north of the United Kingdom meant that November was fairly dry for the country 1 December saw long periods of calm conditions in France also with dry and sunny weather predominating A change in the weather regime began as active depressions brought strong rain and snowfall to the mountains towards the month end Until 13 December France and UK and Ireland were protected by a powerful anticyclone stretched from the Maghreb to the British Isles which deflected the Atlantic storm track north into Scandinavia 4 The Nordic nations were affected by a series of storms including Hilde 17 November 5 Oskari 1 dec 6 Xaver 5 7 Dec Ivar 12 Dec 5 and Zaki and Adam 14 15 Dec Cyclone Xaver is predominantly known for the North sea storm surge of 5 December in the UK The high pressure over Britain Ireland and the Atlantic moved east during mid December opening the way for areas of low pressure to reach western Europe During mid December a strong temperature gradient established over eastern North America temperatures in New York 21 C 70 F Montreal 7 C 19 F which enhanced the jetstream in the North Atlantic 7 8 The lows moved under this powerful jet stream where they explosively deepened before reaching Western Europe 9 Christmas and New Year storms EditBernd 18 19 December Edit Bernd Formed17 December 2013Dissipated21 December 2013Lowest pressure947 hPa 28 0 inHg 10 The first storm of this period was named Bernd Note 1 it was also given the name Emily after Emily Bronte the author who died on 19 December 165 years ago and who wrote Wuthering Heights which featured constant stormy weather by some press 11 12 13 Met Eireann issued red warnings for wind at 9 00am 18 December to Donegal Galway Leitrim Mayo and Sligo 13 The UK Met Office issued orange warnings for the Highlands Western Isles Strathclyde and Northern Ireland 14 UK Met Office maximum hourly gust speed 18 Dec 18 00 19 Dec 07 00 15 Site Area Elevation m Max gust speed mph Max gust speed km h Needles Old Battery Isle of Wight 80 94 151South Uist Range Western Isles 4 90 140Tiree Argyll 9 87 140Plymouth Mountbatten Devon 50 85 137Castlederg Tyrone 49 84 135Pembrey Sands Dyfed 3 82 132Capel Curig Gwynedd 216 81 130Stornoway Airport Western Isles 15 77 124Altnaharra Sutherland 81 77 124Fair Isle Shetland 57 76 122UK Met Office 24 Hour Rainfall Totals 18 Dec 07 00 19 Dec 07 00 2013 15 Site Area Precipitation mm Tredegar Gwent 38 4Cardinham Bodmin Cornwall 35Whitechurch Dyfed 34 4Tyndrum Perthshire 32 2Libanus Powys 30 8Shap Cumbria 30 6Okehampton Devon 30 6Keswick Cumbria 28 8Tulloch Bridge Inverness shire 27Bala Gwynedd 26 4 Dirk 23 24 December Edit Dirk Formed21 December 2013Dissipated28 December 2013Lowest pressure927 hPa 27 4 inHg Main article Cyclone Dirk Dirk formed over North America 16 some storminess was associated with the low in Canada before it moved into the Atlantic The preceding weather in North America saw a steep temperature gradient temperatures in New York 21 C 70 F Montreal 7 C 19 F which enhanced the jetstream in the North Atlantic 8 The low moved under this powerful jet stream where it explosively deepened before reaching Western Europe 16 9 Deepening below 935 hPa 27 6 inHg is considered uncommon in the North Atlantic but has been recorded on a number of occasions measured from ships transiting the ocean and from land based recording stations 17 Offshore the minimum low pressure of the Dirk storm was forecast to reach a low of 927 hPa 27 4 inHg 18 19 On land the low pressure during the storm was measured at 936 8 hPa 27 66 inHg on 24 December at Stornoway Isle of Lewis off the north west coast of Scotland 20 21 This the lowest measured in Britain and Ireland since 1886 127 years when a low of 931 2 hPa 27 50 inHg was recorded in Belfast Northern Ireland 20 The most recent low pressure record near such values in Stornoway was measured on 20 December 1982 at 937 6 hPa 27 69 inHg 20 The all time low pressure record for the British Isles remains at 925 4 hPa 27 33 inHg recorded at Ochtertyre Crieff in Perthshire on 26 January 1884 20 At the southernmost tip of the Faroe Islands a low air pressure of 932 2 hPa was recorded on Christmas Eve at Akraberg lighthouse 22 This was not as low as the Faroese record of 930 3 hPa 27 47 inHg set at Vagar airport during the passage of the Braer Storm of January 1993 22 Erich 26 27 December Edit Erich Formed25 December 2013Dissipated1 January 2014Lowest pressure944 hPa 27 9 inHg UK Met Office maximum hourly gust speed 00 00 27 December to 14 30 27 December 23 Site Area Elevation m Max gust speed mph Max gust speed km h Aberdaron Gwynedd 95 102 164Capel Curig Gwynedd 216 87 140Mumbles Head West Glamorgan 43 85 137St Bees Head Cumbria 124 85 137Inverbervie Kincardineshire 134 81 130Valley Gwynedd 10 81 130Lake Vyrnwy Powys 360 78 126Mona Anglesey 60 78 126Needles Old Battery Isle of Wight 80 78 126Dundrennan Kirkcudbrightshire 113 77 124Pembrey Sands Dyfed 3 76 122UK Met Office 24 Hour Rainfall Totals 00 00 27 December to 14 30 27 December 23 Site Area Precipitation mm Tulloch Bridge Inverness shire 38Tyndrum Perthshire 37 8Charterhouse Roxburghshire 37 8 Kielder Castle Northumberland 33 2Achnagart Ross amp Cromarty 32 8Redesdale Camp Northumberland 28 6 High waves at Porthcawl 27 December Felix amp Gerhard Edit Lows Felix II 966 hPa Gerhard 970 hPa and Anne 993 hPa on 1 January 2014 A stormy period between Christmas and New Year followed as Weather fronts associated with the lows Felix 30 December and Gerhard 1 January passed over the UK which brought further rainfall and some stormy conditions The Felix low was more remote from European mainland and brought strong tightening of isobars across NW France where winds of 141 km h 88 mph were reported in Camaret sur Mer Brittany Low near Iceland brought winds up to 140 km h 87 mph to that country and disrupted traffic and heavy rainfall and brought more flooding to the United Kingdom 24 At Croyde Bay in north Devon a woman was rescued from sea who later died on 31 December 25 27 year old man swept out to sea on Loe Bar Porthleven Cornwall New Year s Eve and on 1 January a man was found dead on the banks of River Torridge in Bideford Devon 26 Over the holiday period several New Year outdoor swimming events were cancelled citation needed Notes Edit Naming conventions where possible follow those adopted by the Free University of Berlin s adopt a vortex scheme Names from other sources referenced in article References Edit a b 2013 Average figures mask some notable highlights Met Office News Blog 31 December 2013 Retrieved 9 February 2014 a b c d Storm force winds bring damage and 10 000 homes lose power BBC News 3 November 2013 Retrieved 11 November 2013 Aberystwyth seafront like war zone after storm waves BBC News 4 November 2013 Retrieved 26 August 2014 BILAN DECEMBRE 2013 grand calme avant les tempetes de la douceur Meteo Paris com in French 30 December 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2014 a b Norske ekstremvaer far navn in Norwegian Norwegian Meteorological Institute Retrieved 18 November 2015 2013 an exceptionally warm year Finnish Meteorological Institute 3 January 2014 Retrieved 18 November 2015 Burt Stephen March 2014 Britain s lowest barometric pressure since 1886 Weather 69 3 79 81 Bibcode 2014Wthr 69 79B doi 10 1002 wea 2285 a b Hammond John 24 December 2013 Why is it so stormy Weather BBC News Retrieved 24 December 2013 a b Taylor Matt UK stormy weather explained BBC News Retrieved 24 December 2013 December 19 2013 surface analysis Met Office Retrieved 26 December 2013 Rao Nathan 18 December 2013 Hold on to your hats 100mph Storm Emily will roar in tonight with a sting in her tail Daily Express Retrieved 9 February 2014 Christmas will be a washout as storms continue AOL Travel 19 December 2013 Retrieved 19 December 2013 a b Cromie Claire 18 December 2014 Storm Emily s 80mph winds could disrupt Northern Ireland power supplies and transport again Belfast Telegraph Retrieved 18 March 2014 Storm Emily Met Office Upgrade Weather Warning To Amber For Scotland And Northern Ireland Weather Forecast blog 18 December 2013 Retrieved 15 March 2014 a b Updated Wind and Rainfall totals for 18th to 19th December Met Office 19 December 2014 Retrieved 18 March 2014 a b Saary Elizabeth 23 December 2013 UK Stormy weather to last 48 hours BBC News Retrieved 23 December 2013 Burt S D February 1987 A new North Aatlantic low pressure record Weather 42 2 53 56 Bibcode 1987Wthr 42 53B doi 10 1002 j 1477 8696 1987 tb06919 x Analysis 24 12 2013 NOAA Archived from the original on 9 February 2014 Retrieved 9 February 2014 Winter storms December 2013 to January 2014 Met Office 12 February 2014 Retrieved 14 February 2014 a b c d Graham Eddie 24 December 2013 Lowest pressure for 127 years recorded in Stornoway today Confirmed Storm Videos UHI Mahara Retrieved 25 December 2013 Christmas Eve weather warning lowest pressure in over 100 years Stornoway Gazette 23 December 2013 Archived from the original on 26 December 2013 Retrieved 25 December 2013 a b Dramatiskt julvader i Sverige och ovriga Europa Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute in Swedish 27 December 2013 Retrieved 7 January 2014 a b Wind and rainfall data 27 December 2013 Met Office 27 December 2013 Retrieved 22 March 2014 Depression Felix coup de vent en Bretagne et Normandie Meteo Paris com in French 30 December 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2014 Devon Woman Dies After Being Swept Out To Sea Sky News 31 December 2014 Retrieved 15 March 2014 Keeble Andy 1 January 2014 Body of man discovered on banks of River Torridge North Devon Gazette Retrieved 15 March 2014 External links EditHouse of Commons Environment Food and Rural Affairs Committee Winter floods 2013 14 Met Office and Centre for Ecology and Hydrology The Recent Storms and Floods in the UK 9 February 2014 Met Office Marine weather analysis December 2013 amp January 2014 Environment Agency report Met Eireann What s up with the Weather this winter Aidan Murphy 14 February 2014 Met Eireann Winter 2013 2014 3 March 2014 Environment Agency Flickr Galleries St Jude s day storm December 2013 East Coast Surge Tidal Surge recovery December 2013 December 2013 flooding January 2014 flooding February 2014 flooding Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2013 2014 Atlantic winter storms in Europe amp oldid 1072420207, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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