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Consecutive January heat records in western Sydney

Ben Domensino, Thursday February 1, 2018 - 14:54 AEDT

Parts of western Sydney just had their hottest January on record for the second year in a row.

The start of 2018 saw no shortage of hot and humid days in Sydney, thanks to a lack of strong cold fronts and extended periods of northerly winds.

A number of western suburbs registered their highest average maximum temperature on record for January, including Richmond (34.2C) and Penrith (34.8C). Richmond's historical record stretches back to the early 1900's.

For Penrith, last month's maximum temperature was 0.95 of a degree above the previous record set during January 2017, with data available back to 1995.

The notably warm month also featured Sydney's highest temperature since 1939, when Penrith reached a sweltering 47.3 degrees.

While records weren't broken in the city, it was far from a mild month. The average maximum temperature at Observatory Hill was 27.9 degrees, making it the second warmest January in 24 years, behind 2017.

The city also experienced its warmest, most humid week in 15 years towards the end of the month.

- Weatherzone

© Weatherzone 2018

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A very wet weekend for southeast Qld, northeast NSW

11:48 AEST A prolonged rainfall event is set to bring large totals to parts of NSW and Qld from Saturday, with possible heavy falls and flooding.  A low-pressure system in the Coral Sea, a deepening coastal trough and persistent easterlies will bring moisture-laden air into southeast Qld and northeast NSW will bring days of rainfall to the region.  While there is not a drop of rain on the radar over southeast Qld and Northeast NSW on Friday morning, the mass of cloud associated with a low in the Coral Sea will enhance rainfall over the weekend.

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