Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption BBC Weather's Matt Taylor explains why it has been so wet in November

With days of rain and extensive floods, the autumn of 2019 seems to have been much wetter than normal. Has it though?

BBC Weather has been looking at the level of rainfall across the country to see how this autumn, which has seemed very wet, actually compares to previous years.

Watnall near Nottingham, Sheffield in South Yorkshire and Scampton and Coningsby in Lincolnshire have all had their wettest autumns on record and are on course for their wettest ever Novembers.

Getty Where is having its rainiest autumn? Rainfall from 1 September to 27 November Sheffield 456mm (previous record 425.2mm in 2000)

Watnall, Notts 367.8mm (previous record 339.6mm in 2000)

Coningsby, Lincs 341.6mm (previous record 284.8mm in 2000)

Scampton, Lincs303.2mm (previous record 271.7mm in 1993) Source: BBC Weather

Furthermore, the average autumn rainfall in Lincolnshire is about 163mm and the annual rainfall is 613mm, so they have had double the seasonal average and about half of their expected annual rainfall in just three months.

But while there have been some dramatic weather events locally, nationally the record has been a long way from being broken.

Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Fishlake near Doncaster was flooded after a river and beck burst their banks

This autumn is currently ranked as the 24th wettest on record for England and Wales with 372.1mm falling on average across the two nations.

The record was set in 2000 when 502.7mm was recorded.

As a single month, this November has been rather wet and by 17 November, England had seen 90% of its average rainfall for the month according the Met Office.

Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Dozens of homes in Doncaster were also flooded in November

The weather this autumn, which meteorologically speaking runs from September until November, has been making the headlines.

Villagers in Fishlake near Doncaster were forced to flee their homes after the River Don and Ea Beck both burst their banks

The former High Sheriff of Derbyshire died after being swept away by swollen waters

A farmer in Lincolnshire says he fears more future flooding after more than 1,000 acres of fields were swamped

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption The BBC's David Shukman views the scale of the flooding in the Doncaster area from a helicopter

Other counties to have had more than their November average by 17 November included Buckinghamshire, Derbyshire, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, Northamptonshire, Oxfordshire, Rutland, Shropshire, Staffordshire, Warwickshire and Worcestershire.

England as a whole has had a mean temperature of 5.3C between 1 and 17 November, 0.9C cooler than the period's average temperature.