Yuma Sun

Calif.’s Death Valley sets tentative world record for hottest month

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LOS ANGELES — The natural furnace of California’s Death Valley was on full broil in July, tentativel­y setting a world record for hottest month ever.

The month’s average temperatur­e was 108.1 degrees, said Todd Lericos, a meteorolog­ist in the Las Vegas office of the National Weather Service.

That roasted the previous record, set in Death Valley in July 2017 when the average was 107.4 degrees.

“It eclipsed the record by quite a bit,” Lericos said, adding that the data is considered preliminar­y and needs to be reviewed before it goes into official record books.

The temperatur­es are measured at Furnace Creek in Death Valley National Park, a vast, austere and rugged landscape in the desert of southeaste­rn California that includes Badwater Basin, which at 282 feet (85.9 meters) below sea level is the lowest point in North America.

The valley got its morbid name from a group of pioneers who got lost there in 1849-1850 and thought it would be the end, according to the National Park Service. Only one died, however, before they found their way out.

Summer heat is so routinely extreme that tourists are warned to drink at least a gallon (4 liters) of water each day, carry additional water in their cars, stay close to their vehicles and watch themselves and others for dizziness, nausea and other symptoms of potentiall­y deadly heat illness.

Visitors are urged to “travel prepared to survive,” avoid hiking at low elevations and return to their air-conditione­d cars for a cool-down after just 10 to 15 minutes of exposure outdoors.

And amid the heat, thundersto­rms bring the threat of flash floods.

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