
This region received only 129 hours of sunshine this month compared to its usual average of 192.5 hours, figures from the Met Office show.
Figures from the Met Office show Southern England experienced its third dullest August since records began, beaten only by 2008 and 1950, with the region receiving only 129 hours of sunshine this month compared to its usual average of 192.5 hours.
Meanwhile East Anglia also experienced the third cloudiest August on record with the area seeing just 127.2 hours of daylight compared to the average 195.7 hours usually seen during the month.
For the UK overall - August was the 12th dullest on record with 127.4 hours of sunshine - the figure is 78 per cent of the 163 hours of sun usually seen.














Comment: Increased cometary and meteoritic dust loading in the atmosphere, volcanic eruptions belching out particulates, and surging cosmic rays due to Earth's weakening magnetic field, are just some of the probable causes behind what are increasingly dark days on our planet:
- Volcanoes, Earthquakes And The 3,600 Year Comet Cycle
- Cosmic climate change: Is the cause of all this extreme weather to be found in outer space?
- Cloud mystery: Climate change and cosmic rays
- Cosmic climate change: 'Space plasma hurricane' observed in ionosphere above North Pole!
See also:- A dark December: In one month Moscow totals 6 minutes of sunlight while Belgium bears just 10.5 hours
- France: Winter 2017-18 had the most rain and least sun
- Winter of discontent: Germany endures darkest winter in 43 years
- Cloudiest January day on record for Minnesota, major flooding of Mississippi river expected
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