Spectral measurements of the solar ultraviolet spectrum have been made at Reading, England, since July 1989. The data presented show the daily and annual changes in the ultraviolet-B (UV-B) part of the spectrum, and illustrate the dominance of the longer wavelengths in grouping the data into a single broadband measurement. The temporal changes (diurnal and annual) cover 2 orders of magnitude at 300 nm, and a factor of 5 at 320 nm. In a single statement of UV-B levels the trend at longer wavelengths predominates, hiding the larger differences at the more biologically important wavelengths. However, the data also show that at mid-high latitudes the UV irradiance at noon in winter is less than that received at any time during the middle 12 h of daylight in summer, and this should be acknowledged when assessing the consequences of ozone depletion. Atmospheric scattering of short wavelength radiation is compared to that of the entire solar spectrum from measurements of diffuse radiation: on a clear day 70-100% of UV-B was diffuse in Reading, with a slight wavelength dependency increasing diffuse radiation at short wavelengths. Under the same conditions scattering of total solar radiation was 21%. The effect of cloud cover is briefly discussed for two specific cases of complete, uniform cloud cover, when attenuation by clouds was approx. 40 and 68%, with little wavelength dependence in either case.