Winter's lowest temperature recorded in Kinbrace

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Icicles at Black Water near GarveImage source, Peter Jolly/Northpix
Image caption,

Icicles at Black Water near Garve in Ross-shire

The UK has recorded its lowest temperature of the winter so far after the mercury fell to -12.4C in Kinbrace in Sutherland at 09:00 on Tuesday.

The remote village had already seen a temperature of -11.8C earlier this winter.

Overnight temperatures also plunged to -8.4C at Benson in Oxfordshire.

The Met Office has issued a yellow "be aware" warning, external for freezing temperatures and ice for Scotland and parts of northern England.

Media caption,

Cold snap: Why is it so cold?

Forecasters have warned that it could again get colder than -12C in places later.

BBC Scotland weather presenter Kawser Quamer said: "Kinbrace dipped to -12.2C at 08:00 and -12.4C at 09:00 this morning, so this marks last night as the coldest night of the winter so far.

"Tonight it is possible we may match or possibly even beat this minimum temperature - but it will all depend on cloud cover.

"Where there is lying snow and the skies are clear, temperatures will drop like a stone. Likely areas will be the Northern Highlands, possibly the Grampians."

Image source, Peter Jolly/Northpix
Image caption,

Local man Ali Mackenzie takes a closer look at the ice at Black Water

Image source, Peter Jolly/Northpix
Image caption,

Freezing temperatures have been forecast for Tuesday night

Image source, Paul Noble/Southern Cairngorms
Image caption,

Snowy scene in the Southern Cairngorms

She added: "It will be localised however, so one spot may dip to -12C, but down the road it could be -1C."

The freezing temperatures come during a cold spell that has already brought ice and snow to large parts of Scotland.

All five of Scotland's mountain snowsports centres have been able to open to skiers and snowboarders.

Photographers, meanwhile, have been drawn to Black Water near Garve in Ross-shire where huge icicles have formed.

The Sportscotland Avalanche Information Service, external has rated the potential risk of avalanches in areas popular with climbers and hillwalkers as "considerable".