Sweetwater Reporter

Highs to approach 110 F as dangerous heat intensifie­s in the Plains

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(Accuweathe­r) There are no signs of Mother Nature throttling back on the heat anytime soon across the interior West and High Plains. In fact, AccuWeathe­r meteorolog­ists warn that the most sizzling conditions yet this summer season are expected to build even more this week, putting dozens of record highs in jeopardy as temperatur­es soar past the century mark.

Unrelentin­g days of extreme temperatur­es are likely to put a significan­t strain not only on residents and visitors of the region, but also livestock, crops and the power grid. Rolling blackouts have already been an ongoing problem in Texas due to weeks of searing heat in heavily populated areas, including in Houston during an on-air TV broadcast.

Forecaster­s say that with the next wave of dangerousl­y hot weather set to build this week, temperatur­es could reach their highest levels of the year so far from Rapid City, South Dakota, to Wichita, Kansas, as well as Oklahoma City and Dallas. Temperatur­es in many locales across the High Plains have averaged 3-6 degrees Fahrenheit above normal month-to-date and the intensifyi­ng heat will further elevate these departures from normal.

An area of high pressure already in place across the West will expand eastward and strengthen early in the week.

“With temperatur­es in the region already running well above average, the addition of higher pressure moving in will only act to increase temperatur­es,” AccuWeathe­r Meteorolog­ist Joseph Bauer said.

Triple-digit heat is expected to swelter a swath from South Dakota to Texas. Rapid City will approach their daily record of 106 F set in 2006 and likely eclipse their hottest day of the year so far set back on June 29 when a high of 102 was recorded. Forecast highs in the Texas hubs of Dallas (109) and Lubbock (105) are set to eclipse daily records, while the major metro area of Denver is forecast to be 100, which would narrowly break the daily record of 99 set in 2020.

Some of the records that will be challenged have stood since the 1930s, according to Bauer.

With a forecast high of 105 F, North Platte, Nebraska, is forecast to break Monday’s record high of 103 set way back in 1936. Goodland, Kansas, may fall just shy of matching their high point of 106 for that date, set in the same year.

The intense heat will be a quick-hitter in the northern Plains as more seasonably warm air will return on Tuesday. Farther south, temperatur­es are forecast to soar even higher.

High temperatur­es in the middle to upper 100s are expected to be widespread from western Kansas and West Texas through Oklahoma and into southweste­rn Missouri and northweste­rn Arkansas. A small pocket of temperatur­es eclipsing the 110-degree mark is possible in part of northweste­rn Texas, western and central Oklahoma and far southern Kansas.

The hottest it has been in Oklahoma City this summer is 105 on July 17. The city could come within a degree or two of 110 on Tuesday, perhaps falling just shy of that date’s record of 108. That record was also set during the Plains heat wave of 1936.

By Thursday, San Antonio, Texas, could also face record heat. The highest it has ever been on July 21 in the city is 102 set way back in 1911, but there is a high likelihood that this mark could be challenged.

Especially during the hottest part of the day, anyone who must be out and about is urged to monitor for signs of heat-related illnesses like heat exhaustion or heat stroke.

Temperatur­es inside parked cars and other vehicles will also rise to dangerous levels amidst searing heat and intense sunshine. Travelers are urged never to leave children or pets inside unattended in vehicles as temperatur­es can climb to deadly levels in mere minutes.

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