Extreme heat wave spreads across U.S with over 55 million people under heat alerts

Triple digit temperatures are expected across the hottest interior areas of Southern California, according to the NWS.

Extreme heat wave spreads across U.S with over 55 million people under heat alerts

 

The heat wave has scorched Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, among other southern parts over the past week, setting or challenging all-time records.

The extreme heat wave that has back much of southern United States continues to spread to other regions of the country this week, with over 55 million people now under heat alerts.

The heat wave has scorched Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, among other southern parts over the past week, setting or challenging all-time records.

The life-threatening “oppressive” heat dome was producing “dangerous heat and humidity in Texas and spread into the lower Mississippi River Valley,” according to the U.S. National Weather Service (NWS).

San Angelo in West Texas registered 114 degrees Fahrenheit twice in June, the highest ever recorded there. The border town of Del Rio hit 115 degrees Fahrenheit for the first time.

 

A reading of 119 degrees Fahrenheit on Friday in the Big Bend area of southwest Texas came within one degree of trying the state’s previous all-time high of 120 recorded in 1994, according to meteorologists for the NWS in Midland.

 

The heat wave is continuing to bake Texas, and will expand in the coming days across much of the southern Plains, the Deep South, the Lower Mississippi Valley and the Gulf Coast, according to the NWS.

More of the Gulf region will see dangerous heat on Tuesday, lasting in some place through the Fourth of July, according to weather forecasts.

Excessive heat warning is plastered across much of Texas, parts of New Mexico and Arizona and along the Gulf Coasts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, while heat advisories stretch from northern Florida to southern New Mexico.

 

Meanwhile, with a high- pressure system building over Southern California, the first heat wave of the summer is expected to hit the western region later this week into the holiday weekend, focused across interior.

 

Triple digit temperatures are expected across the hottest interior areas of Southern California, according to the NWS.

 

Extreme heat has been the greatest weather-related cause of death in the United States for the past 30 years — more than hurricanes, tornadoes, flooding or extreme cold — killing over 700 people per year, according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

 

Studies have shown that climate change is making heat waves both more frequent and more intense, increasing the risks of heat-related illnesses and deaths, droughts, droughts and wildfires.

 

 

 

Source & Courtesy: Xinhua News Agency

 

 

 

Climate ChangeHeat WaveNew MexicoOklahomatexasU.S
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