The Prince George Citizen

Heat records fall

- Malcolm RITTER Citizen news service

NEW YORK — If you’ve been hot lately, you’re not alone. Record high temperatur­es have been logged over the past week in North America and around the world.

Here’s a quick look at the heat.

What’s going on?

For the week through Tuesday, 227 U.S. records were broken for highest temperatur­e for particular days, and another 157 were tied, federal statistics show.

There was also a lack of cooling overnight, with 451 records broken for warmest minimum temperatur­es for particular days, and another 421 tied. In Burlington, Vt., for example, the temperatur­e got down only to 27 C on July 2, its highest low temperatur­e ever.

Some other countries have seen all-time highs, such as 41 C in Tblisi, the capital of the nation of Georgia, on Wednesday, and 43 C in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, on Sunday. On Monday, Iran experience­d its hottest July temperatur­e ever, 53 C.

Is this climate change?

Heat waves are a part of every summer, and scientists hesitate to link any single weather event to the warming climate that researcher­s have measured over long periods of time. Still, Matthew Rosencrans of the National Weather service says that because of global warming, “heat waves like this are likely to be more frequent going forward than they have been in the past.”

Jeff Masters, director of meteorolog­y for the private forecastin­g service Weather Undergroun­d, said the past week’s heat wave “is the kind of thing you expect to see on a warming planet... it’s easier to set a heat record.” He notes that 2016 was the warmest year on record globally, and that year saw the most all-time heat records broken around the world.

Is any relief in sight?

In the U.S., Masters said, a cold front should bring relief from the heat and humidity in the Midwest and Northeast on Friday through Sunday. Southern California will get severe heat during that time, he said, with a high of 39 C forecast for Friday in Los Angeles. That city has experience­d only five July days in recorded history that were warmer, he said.

The coming week will be pretty hot over most of the U.S., especially in the West, forecaster­s say.

For the last two weeks of July, temperatur­es over the eastern half of the country are likely to be closer to average than they were this past week, while probably remaining above average in the western part of the country and the southern Plains.

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