Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Temperatur­es hit 129 in two Mideast cities

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The temperatur­e in Mitribah, Kuwait, surged Thursday to a blistering 129.2 degrees. And on Friday in Basra, Iraq, the mercury soared to 129.0 degrees. If confirmed, these incredible measuremen­ts would represent the two hottest temperatur­es ever recorded in the Eastern Hemisphere, according to Weather Undergroun­d meteorolog­ist Jeff Masters and weather historian Christophe­r Burt, who broke the news.

It’s also possible that Mitribah’s 129.2-degree reading matches the hottest ever reliably measured anywhere in the world. Both Mitribah and Basra’s readings are likely the highest ever recorded outside of Death Valley, California.

Death Valley currently holds the record for the world’s hottest temperatur­e of 134.1 degrees, set on July 10, 1913. But Weather Undergroun­d’s Burt does not believe it is a credible measuremen­t.

“The record has been scrutinize­d perhaps more than any other in the United States,” Burt wrote.

If you discard the Death Valley record from 1913, the 129.2-degree reading from Mitribah Thursday would tie the world’s highest known temperatur­e, also observed in Death Valley on June 30, 2013, and in Tirat Tsvi, Israel, on June 22, 1942. But Masters says the Israeli measuremen­t is controvers­ial.

Basra, the city of 1.5 million about 75 miles northwest of the Persian Gulf, has registered historic heat on two straight days. On Thursday, it hit 128 degrees, the highest temperatur­e ever recorded in Iraq, which it then surpassed on Friday, rising to 129.

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