The Marine Society & Sea Cadets

Our role is to provide personal development opportunities and support in a maritime context for young people and professional seafarers from all the sea services.

Depressions

Depressions are areas of low pressure that bring unsettled, cloudy weather. These low pressure systems develop to the west of the British Isles in the Atlantic and are blown in a north-eastwards direction. They are responsible for the very changeable weather which is common across Britain.

  • Depressions start where cold polar air from the north and warm tropical air from the south collide along an imaginary line called the “polar front”.

  • Warm tropical air gradually rises up over cold polar air to form a warm front.

  • This rising air results in less air at the surface, creating an area of low pressure.

  • The cold, polar air then rushes in behind to replace the rising warm, tropical air and forms a cold front.

  • Soon winds begin to spiral around the low pressure centre as cold chases warm.

  • The two gradually merge to form an occluded front.

  • Winds blow out from the centre of the low-pressure cell anti-clockwise and give very changeable weather and frontal rainfall.

  • As the warm front approaches, it rains steady, later giving way to drizzle.

  • After the warm front has passed, the weather becomes clear and milder but not for long...

  • The occluded front brings continuous rain.

  • As the cold front approaches, it becomes windier and colder.

  • As the cold front passes over there is heavy rain or thunderstorms, giving way to showers.

  • As the front moves away, the rain stops but the air becomes colder.
The Marine Society & Sea Cadets, 202 Lambeth Road, London SE1 7JW

tel: 020 7654 7000   fax: 020 7928 8914   email: info@ms-sc.org

Patron: HM The Queen
A charity registered in England and Wales 313013 and in Scotland SC037808.