The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The heat is back on high: May smashes U.S. records

- By Seth Borenstein Associated Press

Record heat WASHINGTON — returned to the United States with a vengeance in May.

May warmed to a record average 65.4 degrees in the Lower 48 states, breaking the high of 64.7 set in 1934, according to federal weather figures released Wednesday. May was 5.2 degrees above the 20th century’s average for the month.

Weather stations in the nation broke or tied nearly 8,600 daily heat records in May, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion reported. It hit 100 in Minneapoli­s on May 28, the earliest the city has seen triple digits.

“The warmth was coastto-coast,” said climate scientist Jake Crouch at NOAA’s Centers for Environmen­tal Informatio­n.

What made May seem even warmer was that April was unusually cool for much of the United States, he said. Wisconsin had its coldest April, followed by its second-warmest May.

The United Kingdom , Germany and other places also set May heat records, but overall global figures for the month are still being tabulated, Crouch said.

It was especially warm at night in the U.S during May. The overnight low temperatur­e averaged 52.5 degrees nationwide. That broke the record by 2 degrees, which “is unheard of ” at this time of year, he said.

April was cool because the jet stream brought polar air south, but it shifted out of that pattern in May. Then, a tropical system and subtropica­l storm Alberto brought warm moisture to the eastern part of the country, while the West was quite dry. That allowed temperatur­es to heat up.

“Nature is dealing cards from a very different deck now compared to the 20th century,” Pennsylvan­ia State University climate scientist David Titley said in an email.

 ?? SETH WENIG / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rick Stewart sits in the sun in a park in Weehawken, N.J. According to weather records released on Wednesday, May reached a record average 65.4 degrees in the continenta­l United States — 5.2 degrees above the 20th century average.
SETH WENIG / ASSOCIATED PRESS Rick Stewart sits in the sun in a park in Weehawken, N.J. According to weather records released on Wednesday, May reached a record average 65.4 degrees in the continenta­l United States — 5.2 degrees above the 20th century average.

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