The Commercial Appeal

Heat wave burns record books

Temps may tie all-time June record

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LAS VEGAS — A heat wave smothering the West is rewriting the record books, likely tying a more than century-old record for the U. S. while putting Las Vegas through its hottest June ever.

The National Weather Service says California’s Death Valley National Park tentativel­y recorded a high temperatur­e of 129 degrees on Sunday, which would tie the all-time June record high for the United States. It could take months to verify whether the record set in 1902 at Volcano, a former town in southeaste­rn California, was matched.

The reading, however, is short of the all-time, world record 134 degrees set in Death Valley on July 10, 1913.

Triple-digit heat struck again elsewhere in Southern California, while metropolit­an Phoenix saw just a slight drop in temperatur­es after experienci­ng record-breaking heat Saturday. The 119-degree high in Phoenix on Saturday marked the fourth-hottest day in metro Phoenix since authoritie­s started keeping temperatur­e records more than 110 years ago. The high temperatur­e for the metro area hit 115 on Sunday.

Las Vegas temperatur­es have been at 115 and above in recent days — including a record-tying 117 on Sunday — helping make June the hottest ever in Sin City.

National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Chris Stachelski says Las Vegas will continue to bake in near-record temperatur­es at least through Thursday.

June was the third-hottest in Salt Lake City history, highlighte­d by the record high for the month of 105, set on Friday and Saturday.

The forecast for the first week of July calls for temperatur­es of 100 degrees or higher Tuesday through Thursday.

That would mark a streak of eight straight days of triple-digit heat, said National Weather Service meteorolog­ist Nanette Hosenfeld. The record is 10 consecutiv­e days, set in 2003.

Six half-marathon runners in Southern California were hospitaliz­ed Sunday for heat-related illnesses. A day earlier, paramedics responding to a Nevada home without air conditioni­ng found an elderly man dead.

Southern California will continue to broil under a massive heat wave, though forecaster­s say more record-setting temps are unlikely.

High-temperatur­e records were shattered across the region over the weekend. The high of 115 at Lancaster’s Fox Field on Sunday represente­d not just a record for a June 30 but an all-time high — surpassing the 114 degrees recorded 53 years ago.

In Oregon, circling buzzards led neighbors to discover sheep with full-grown wool that had dropped dead of the heat in a field in rural Marion County.

The sheriff’s office said Monday that 30 to 40 had died in the 80-acre field covered with green standing grass. Deputies responded Sunday and gave remaining sheep water and food. More than 200 survived.

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