Weather: record 110,000 lightning bolts strike during 'superstorms'
Britain was hit by a record amount of lightning strikes during the freak
thunderstorms that battered the country on Thursday, experts have said.
The Met Office said more than 110,000 lightning bolts were recorded across the
UK, with more than 200 strikes recorded every minute at the peak of
activity.
Experts said this was 40 times higher than an average lightning storm and was
the equivalent of four months’ worth of strikes in one day.
Government forecasters said most of Thursday’s strikes, which came as rare
“super cell” thunderstorms battered the Midlands and northern regions, were
fork lightning and hit the ground.
In one dramatic video, footage showed a spectacular bolt striking the lighting
storm over a field in Suffolk, UK Bridge, linking Newcastle and Gateshead,
which captured the intensity of the fierce storms that swept across the
North.
While the Met Office does not maintain lightning records, the UK Tornado and
Storm Research Organisation (TORRO) suggested Thursday’s levels were a
record amount to hit Britain in one day.
A spokesman said Britain’s previous highest published daily lightning ground
strike total was 85,000, recorded on July 24, 1994.
Forecasters said the huge levels of lightning was caused by warm air,
originally from Spain and Portugal, travelling North where it was met by
cold air caused by several weather fronts that had come in from the Atlantic
in the West.
The Met Office described it as an "exceptionally severe weather".
Emma Sharples, a Met Office forecaster, said this combination then produced
significant levels of “convection”, which in turn caused the lightning
strikes.
“It has been a good few years since we have seen something of that magnitude
across the UK,” she added. “From the reports we have received it was quite a
spectacle.”
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