The Jerusalem Post

US West scorches, Death Valley reaches 54 degrees

- • By BRIDGET BENNETT

DEATH VALLEY, Calif. (Reuters) – A brutal heat wave punishing the US West pushed temperatur­es toward all-time records for a third day on Sunday, as Death Valley in California, scorching at 54 Celsius (130-degrees Fahrenheit), was again one of the hottest spots on the planet.

A thermomete­r outside Furnace Creek Visitors Center in the heart of Death Valley showed 134 degrees Fahrenheit shortly before 4 p.m. on Sunday, although a National Park Service ranger said it typically measured higher than the official reading.

The National Weather Service recorded the temperatur­e on Saturday at 54 degrees, which if verified would be one of the highest ever recorded on Earth. A ranger measured the sidewalk temperatur­e outside the visitors center at 81 degrees Celsius on Sunday afternoon.

“I just came up here to see how hot it gets,” said Richard Rader of Scottsdale, Arizona, who said he had ridden his bike 16 km. across Death Valley on Sunday.

Most tourists left their air-conditione­d cars only long enough to pose for pictures with the thermomete­r.

The National Weather Service issued excessive heat warnings across much of the region and cautioned residents that the high temperatur­es could be hazardous to the their health, especially small children and the elderly.

The sweltering heat, which extended across much of the Pacific Northwest, pressured power grids and fueled major wildfires, including a blaze burning in Southern Oregon that threatened 1,200 homes and other structures.

The Bootleg Fire, which broke out on Tuesday, had blackened 580 sq km in and around the Fremont-Winema National Forest as of Sunday afternoon with no containmen­t.

Conditions at the blaze were so severe that the 926 firefighte­rs working the lines were forced in some cases to “disengage and move to predetermi­ned safety zones,” managers said. No fatalities had been reported.

The flames were burning along a high voltage power corridor connecting Oregon’s power grid with California’s, worrying officials in both states that electricit­y could be knocked out to thousands of homes and businesses.

Residents in hundreds of homes were already under mandatory evacuation orders and the Klamath County Sheriffs Department said it would make arrests if necessary to keep people out of those areas.

Residents in additional parts of southern Oregon were under “Go now” orders on Sunday while still more were told to “get set.”

Governor Kate Brown declared a state of emergency on July 6.

 ?? (Jason Redmond/Reuters) ?? KATHERINE MILTON, originally from Juneau, Alaska, enjoys a homemade cooling-off mist station that a family set up in their front yard especially for homeless people during the scorching weather in Seattle.
(Jason Redmond/Reuters) KATHERINE MILTON, originally from Juneau, Alaska, enjoys a homemade cooling-off mist station that a family set up in their front yard especially for homeless people during the scorching weather in Seattle.

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