Lethbridge Herald

July land temps hottest on record

- THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — WASHINGTON

Earth yet again sizzled with unpreceden­ted heat last month.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion said Thursday Earth sweated to its second hottest month since recordkeep­ing began in 1880. At 61.89 degrees (16.63 Celsius), last month was behind July 2016’s all-time record by .09 degrees.

But Earth’s land temperatur­es in July were the hottest on record at 59.96 degrees (15.5 Celsius), passing July 2016’s by one-seventh of a degree.

Land measuremen­ts are important because that’s where we live, said NOAA climate scientist Jake Crouch.

Earlier this week, NASA calculated that July 2017 was a tad hotter than 2016, making it essentiall­y a tie for all-time hottest month. NASA uses a newer set of ocean measuremen­ts and includes estimates for the Arctic unlike NOAA.

Record heat was reported in Africa, Australia, parts of Asia, the Middle East and the Indian ocean, Crouch said.

“There is simply no denying the mounting evidence globally and regionally — the new climate normal is upon us now,” said University of Oklahoma meteorolog­y professor Jason Furtado, who wasn’t part of the new report.

Crouch said this heat is “very strange” because there is no El Nino spiking global temperatur­es, like in 2016. That shows the hot temperatur­es are part of long-term, manmade warming trend, he said. This year is on pace to be the second or third hottest on record.

Scientists highlighte­d recent extreme weather in the Pacific Northwest, where a prolonged dry spell and unusual 100-degree weather followed an extraordin­arily wet winter, sparking wildfires.

That means smoke from wildfires could threaten people’s viewing of Monday’s total solar eclipse, said Oregon State University climate scientist Kathie Dello.

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