Los Angeles Times

Record-setting heat

July brought historical­ly high temperatur­es to many Southland areas.

- By Melissa Etehad

July saw new temperatur­e milestones from Long Beach to Death Valley.

Searing temperatur­es plagued many parts of Southern California during the month of July as a massive heat wave set records in Death Valley, Van Nuys, Long Beach and other areas, according to the National Weather Service.

All-time average record highs in July were reported at Long Beach Airport (77.8 degrees), Van Nuys Airport (83.6), Lancaster Airport (87.2) and Oxnard (73.1), according to the National Weather Service.

It was the third warmest July in downtown Los Angeles since records began in 1877, with the average temperatur­e for the month reaching 79.9 degrees. The warmest July for that area was in 2006.

It was also the warmest July on record in Fresno. For 26 consecutiv­e days temperatur­es were above 100 degrees, said Brian Ochs, meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service in Hanford. Ochs said the previous record was set in 2005 with 22 days in a row of temperatur­es above 100 degrees.

Bakersfiel­d also saw

broiling temperatur­es that set records. Ochs said it was the second warmest July on record, with temperatur­es exceeding the monthly July average by about 6 degrees.

Bakersfiel­d saw 21 days in a row in July of temperatur­es above 100 degrees — the ninth longest on record. The record was set in 1906, when temperatur­es exceeded 100 degrees for 50 consecutiv­e days.

Death Valley also set many records.

Toward the end of July, Death Valley had three consecutiv­e days of temperatur­es reaching 127 degrees, said meteorolog­ist David Sweet with the National Weather Service in Oxnard.

The average temperatur­e for the month of July in Death Valley was 108 degrees, which is the warmest on record. Before that, the record was set in 2017, with the average reaching 107.4 .

The blazing heat is the result of persistent high pressure over the Western U.S., meteorolog­ists said.

“It’s basically a stable dry air mass that develops, and it means stable, hotter and dry,” Ochs said. “We knew it was going to be a warmerthan-average July but not necessary to the degree that it was so, so I’d say it’s a little bit of a surprise but not entirely unexpected.”

 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? ADRIAN VALDIVIA gives Acacia Valencia a ride on an ice cream cart Wednesday in downtown Los Angeles, which endured its third-hottest July on record.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ADRIAN VALDIVIA gives Acacia Valencia a ride on an ice cream cart Wednesday in downtown Los Angeles, which endured its third-hottest July on record.
 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? ASHLEY MOORE plays in the pool with her 2-yearold son, Alijah, in Highland Park on Wednesday.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ASHLEY MOORE plays in the pool with her 2-yearold son, Alijah, in Highland Park on Wednesday.

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