Climate of the UK (Edexcel GCSE Geography A)

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Jacque Cartwright

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Changes in the UK Climate

  • The climate of the UK over the last 1,000 years has fluctuated between cold and warm

  • During the Medieval Warm Period, the UK was warmer than it is now

    • Winters and summers were around 5°C higher than today

    • There was little ice in the northern seas, allowing Vikings to land in northern England

    • England was warm enough to support vineyards

    • There were higher crop yields and a growing population

    • This was due to increased solar radiation

Average UK temperature changes

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  • From 1315 CE, rainfall was 60% higher than now

    • Livestock drowned

    • Crops rotted in the fields

    • Pigs were unaffected but were soon killed as a main food supply

    • Thousands of people died of starvation and disease

    • Extreme weather events—weeks of rain, storms and long drought periods—became normal for the UK until 1600s

  • During the Little Ice Age, temperatures were low enough for:

    • Frost fairs on the Thames river

    • Valley glaciers grew in size

    • Arctic sea ice increases and stops sailing between Europe and the UK

    • Crops failed and animals died

    • Average temperatures decreased by 2°C

    • There were cold winters and freezing coastal seas

    • Caused by increased volcanic activity and decreased solar radiation

  • From 1700s onward, winters remained bitterly cold, with fluctuating weather events during the summer

  • The Thames froze over for the last time in 1895, inline with the start of the UKs industrial revolution

  • The increased burning of fossil fuels has led to the UKs climate consistently warming

Variations in Temperature, Location, Prevailing Wind & Rainfall

  • The UK has what is called a temperate, wet climate

  • It has a mild, seasonal climate with cool, wet winters and warm, wet summers

  • Factors that affect the UK weather include

    • Location:

      • The UKs location is mid-latitude, which is between 50° N and 60° N

      • The country sits on the boundary between the northern Polar and Ferrel atmospheric cells

      • Cold air descends from the north and meets warm air rising from the south 

      • This causes unsettled weather

    • Maritime influence:

      • The UK is surrounded by sea

      • The air picks up moisture before reaching the country

      • Leading to rainfall year-round

      • Coastal areas are warmer in winter and cooler in summer 

      • Seas take up the heat in the summer, cooling the surrounding land

      • During the winter, the heat is released, keeping the coastal land warmer

    • North Atlantic Drift:

      • Ocean currents bringing warm waters from the Caribbean to the west coast of the UK

      • This keeps the west coast of the UK warmer than other regions of the country.

    • Prevailing wind:

      • The main direction the wind travels for the UK is south-west

      • This air comes across the Atlantic Ocean, bringing moisture and more rain

    • Air masses:

      • Large volumes of air with similar water content and temperatures

      • Classified by the region where they form:

  • Where air masses meet, frontal rainfall is common

Frontal rainfall

Frontal rainfall

Frontal rainfall occurs when warm and cold air masses meet and the warm air rises over the cold air

  • There are five types of air masses that bring different weather to the UK:

Air Masses of the UK

Air Mass

Weather

Polar Maritime

Cold and wet

Arctic Maritime

Very cold and wet

Polar Continental

Cold and dry

Tropical Continental

Warm and dry

Tropical Maritime

Warm and wet

  • There are regional variations within the UK 

  • The higher an area, the wetter and cooler it is

  • Mountainous regions get a lot of relief rainfall

Relief rainfall

Relief rainfall

Relief rainfall occurs when warm, moist air is forced to rise over high ground

UKs regional climate variations 

IMAGE

There are regional climatic variations due to factors such as location, altitude and air masses

Worked Example

The UK climate varies from place to place.

Define the term prevailing wind.

(1 mark)

Answer:

  • In this instance, you do not need to state the direction of the UK's prevailing wind, only what the term means

  • The prevailing wind is the direction the wind usually blows from. (1)

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Jacque Cartwright

Author: Jacque Cartwright

Jacque graduated from the Open University with a BSc in Environmental Science and Geography before doing her PGCE with the University of St David’s, Swansea. Teaching is her passion and has taught across a wide range of specifications – GCSE/IGCSE and IB but particularly loves teaching the A-level Geography. For the last 5 years Jacque has been teaching online for international schools, and she knows what is needed to pass those pesky geography exams.