Record-setting temperatures forecast in Dallas as scorching heat wave continues to bake the US - Times of India

OKLAHOMA CITY: The summer time of 2023 could also be drawing to a detailed — however the excessive warmth is just not: Extra record-shattering temperatures — this time throughout Texas — are anticipated Saturday and Sunday because the U.S. continues to bake.
Highs of 109 levels Fahrenheit (42.8 levels Celsius) forecast for Saturday and 110 F (43.3 C) on Sunday in Dallas would break the present file of 107 F (41.7 C) every day, each set in 2011, and would come after a excessive of 109 F (42.8 C) on Thursday broke a file of 107 F set in 1951, in keeping with Nationwide Climate Service meteorologist Tom Bradshaw.
“There really is no relief in sight, there is some hint by the end of August, maybe Labor Day, high temperatures will begin to fall below 100,” Bradshaw mentioned. “It’s possible to see 100-degree-plus temperatures through the first half of September, at least off and on.”
The warmth wave inflicting distress in Texas this weekend is simply the newest to punish the U.S. this 12 months.
Scientists have lengthy warned that local weather change, pushed by the burning of fossil fuels, by deforestation and by sure agricultural practices, will result in extra and extended bouts of utmost climate together with hotter temperatures.
The complete globe has simmered to file warmth each in June and July. And if that’s not sufficient, smoke from wildfires, floods and droughts have precipitated issues globally.
Simply days in the past, day by day excessive temperatures within the Pacific Northwest broke data. At Portland Worldwide Airport, the day by day excessive temperature Monday of 108 levels Fahrenheit (42.2 Celsius) broke the earlier day by day file of 102 levels (38.9 C), the Nationwide Climate Service mentioned. It was additionally the primary time in 130 years of recorded climate that Seattle had three days in a row with lows of 67 levels (19.4 C) or hotter.
Final month, the Phoenix space broiled beneath a record-setting 31 days of day by day excessive temperatures of 110 F (43.4 C) or above. The historic warmth started blasting the area in June, stretching from Texas throughout New Mexico and Arizona and into California’s desert. The earlier file was 18 straight days, set in 1974. In July, the continental United States set a file for in a single day heat, offering little aid from daytime warmth for folks, animals, crops and the electrical grid, meteorologists mentioned.
In the meantime, in Waco, about 90 miles (145 kilometers) south of Dallas, there was no rainfall for a record-tying 49 straight days, since solely a hint quantity on July 1.
“There’s no sign that’s going to change anytime soon … Waco is on track to be driest summer on record,” Bradshaw mentioned.
In Oklahoma Metropolis, the excessive is anticipated to succeed in 106 F (41.1 C) levels, tying a file set in 1934 and in Topeka, Kansas, the excessive is forecast to succeed in 108 F (42.2 C), one diploma shy of the file set in 1936.
An extreme warmth warning is in place from south Texas, western Louisiana throughout jap Oklahoma, jap Kansas and all of Missouri. Extreme warmth warnings have been additionally issued for components of Arkansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Nebraska, Illinois and Iowa.
In Minneapolis the place the common day by day excessive is 81.7 F (27.6 C) levels, the excessive is to succeed in 95 F (35 C), earlier than a chilly entrance drops temperatures into the mid-80s on Sunday, in keeping with the climate service.
A warmth advisory was issued for Sunday for components of southern Wisconsin and excessive ozone ranges are to have an effect on air high quality in Indiana the place temperatures are anticipated to succeed in the mid-90s by Wednesday, the climate service reported.
A excessive of 95 F (35 C) is forecast by midweek in Chicago, 12 levels above regular.
Extra scorching temperatures baked most of Louisiana on Saturday. The Shreveport space Saturday noticed temperatures as excessive as 110 F (43.3 C) whereas New Orleans hit the 101 F (38.3 C) mark.
Megan Williams, a meteorologist with the Nationwide Climate Service in Slidell, mentioned residents by way of Sunday may count on warmth index values — or what outdoors seems like — between 108 to 113 F (42.2 to 45 C) — and in some instances higher than 113 F.
“The most vulnerable people are at both ends of the age spectrum,” Penn State College Prof. W. Larry Kenney instructed The Occasions-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate.
“So infants, because they’re really at the mercy of their parents to keep them cool and keep them well hydrated, are vulnerable to temperature extremes,” Kenney mentioned. “And then people over the age of 65 are vulnerable. A lot of elderly don’t have access to places with air conditioning. And as we get older, our body is less able to tolerate those conditions of high heat and humidity.”
The Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention stories simply 600 to 700 warmth deaths yearly in the US, however specialists say the mishmash of ways in which greater than 3,000 counties calculate warmth deaths means we don’t actually know the way many individuals die within the U.S. every year.

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