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Exactly where and when UK weather maps turn icy blue with -10C deep freeze to cover

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Newappear to show where and when the UK will take a chilly turn with some regions dropping to a frosty -10C.

The Metdesk maps from WXCharts show temperatures will drop across the UK on November 20. Around 12pm the map shows parts of North Yorkshire, Cumbria and the North East will fall to as low as -10C.

Meanwhile parts of southern and Yorkshire will see the mercury tumble to lows of -6C and -4C, respectively. In the South East, East Anglia and Midlands the temperatue will hover around 0C.

In Wales the mercury will hover between -2C to 4C in northern regions while the south will see 0C to 2C. Southern and central areas of Northern Ireland will fall to -3C while northern areas will remain at 0C.

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Maps also show that parts of northern Scotland, northern Wales, Merseyside and western regions in Northern Ireland will see snowfall. The white stuff appears to be short lived with conditions clearing over the following days.

The said most "if not all" parts of the UK would face cold or very cold conditions with wintry showers in northern and coastal areas. The November 19 to November 28 forecast added: "Overnight frost will likely be widespread and occasionally strong winds will result in significant wind chill.

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"However, there may be more organised areas of rain and snow, accompanied by strong winds, which run across some parts. This could lead to some disruptive at times, especially at the start of this period. Briefly milder conditions may accompany these in the south. There is a hint that it may become less cold late in the period, but still likely remain mostly unsettled with further spells of rain and snow."

The long-term forecast for November 29 and December 13 said weather pattern signals vary at this time, The forecast said: "In general, there looks like a trend towards drier and more settled conditions, with high pressure potentially being the more dominant influence over the UK.

"However. there is a chance of more changeable weather patterns at times, which would see Atlantic weather systems periodically move across the country. These will bring some wetter and windier interludes with a risk of some snow, especially for hills in the north. Temperatures trending closer to average, especially in the south."

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