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Month's worth of rain hits parts of UK

Tom PilgrimAAP
More than 60 flood warnings and alerts are current in Wales.
Camera IconMore than 60 flood warnings and alerts are current in Wales.

Heavy rain has blocked railway lines and triggered a host of flood alerts with some parts of the UK hit by more than a month's worth of precipitation in 26 hours.

A stretch of six Met Office weather warnings covering mostly western areas from Scotland south to Plymouth are in place this weekend as forecasters predict more wet conditions.

Senior meteorologist Marco Petagna said 127.6mm of rain fell at Llyn-y-Fan, Carmarthenshire, South Wales, between 6am on Friday and 8am on Saturday and 115mm dropped at Treherbert in Mid-Glamorgan.

He said the average rainfall for the whole of February in South Wales was 98mm.

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"So they've had more than a month's worth of rain in 24 hours," he said.

At Honister Pass in Cumbria, 112mm fell in the same period - the same amount as the February average for the region.

Further south at Princetown in Dartmoor, Devon, 72.2mm fell - around three quarters of the 100mm February average.

On Saturday morning, Natural Resources Wales had 23 flood warnings in place, which advise immediate action, across the south of the country, on top of 41 flood alerts.

The Environment Agency had issued 11 flood warnings and 96 flood alerts across England, while the Scottish Environment Protection Agency had 35 flood warnings and 10 flood alerts in place.

The National Rail Enquiries website was reporting disruption on rail networks in Wales and southwest England due to flooding on Saturday morning.

Flooding of the railway at Roche in Cornwall meant Great Western Railway trains were unable to run between Newquay and Par.

In Wales, flooded tracks between Abercynon and Merthyr Tydfil left all lines closed.

Flooding between Hereford, in Herefordshire, and Newport, in Wales, was also causing disruption to journeys on Saturday.

Within a Met Office amber weather warning for heavy, persistent rainfall, covering South Wales from 8pm on Friday to 6pm on Saturday, up to 200mm could drop in total.

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