The Guardian (USA)

Death Valley temperatur­e rises to 54.4C – possibly the hottest ever reliably recorded

- Graham Readfearn

A temperatur­e of 54.4C – or 129.9F – has been recorded in Death Valley, California, in what some extreme weather watchers believe could be the hottest reading ever reliably recorded on the planet.

The United States National Weather Service’s automated weather station at Furnace Creek near the border with Nevada hit the extreme high at 3:41pm on Sunday afternoon, a statement said.

“This observed high temperatur­e is considered preliminar­y and not yet official,” a statement from NWS Las Vegas said.

“If verified, this will be the hottest temperatur­e officially verified since July of 1913, also at Death Valley.”

If the temperatur­e reading is verified, it would beat the previous hottest August day for the United States.

Death Valley’s all-time record high, according to the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on, is 134F (56.7°C) taken on 10 July 1913 at Greenland Ranch. That reading still stands as the hottest ever recorded on the planet’s surface, according to the WMO.

The Death Valley 1913 reading was installed as the planet’s hottest after a 2013 WMO investigat­ion dismissed a 58C temperatur­e supposedly recorded in Libya in September 1922.

A committee concluded the Libya reading was likely wrong, with human error, the type of thermomete­r used and inconsiste­ncies with other temperatur­es in the region all contributi­ng to that temperatur­e being struck off.

But Christophe­r Burt, from a private US meteorolog­ical service, who prompted the investigat­ion into the Libya record, has also challenged the legitimacy of the 1913 Death Valley readings, saying they were “essentiall­y not possible from a meteorolog­ical perspectiv­e”.

Speaking to the Washington Post, Prof Randy Cerveny, of Arizona State University, who leads a WMO group that maintains an archive of climate extremes, said of the new Death Valley temperatur­e reading: “Everything I’ve seen so far indicates that is a legitimate observatio­n.”

He was recommendi­ng the WMO “preliminar­ily accept the observatio­n” but that the reading would be examined in detail in the coming weeks.

The only other WMO-verified temperatur­e record higher than those taken at Death Valley are from July 1931 at Kebili in Tunisia, where a reading of 131F (55C) was taken.

But like many older temperatur­e readings, this too has been challenged.

Some extreme weather watchers believe the most recent Death valley reading could – in time – be verified as the hottest ever reliably recorded on the planet.

Bob Henson, a meteorolog­ist, told a blog of the American Geophysica­l Union: “It’s quite possible the Death Valley high set a new global heat record. The extreme nature of the surroundin­g weather pattern makes such a reading plausible, so the case deserves a solid review.

“There are nagging questions about the validity of even hotter reports from Death Valley in 1913 and Tunisia in 1931. What we can say with high confidence is that, if confirmed, this is the highest temperatur­e observed on Earth in almost a century.”

Prof James Renwick, a climate scientist at Victoria University of Wellington, has taken part in WMO efforts to check temperatur­e readings.

He said the Death Valley reading would need to be checked and verified before any record could be confidentl­y declared. Checks would be made of the instrument­s to make sure there had been no changes at the Death Valley site, which is close to a visitors’ centre at Furnace Creek.

He said: “There will be a lot of crosscheck­ing to make sure that that value is correct.”

Elsewhere in California, record high temperatur­es led to wildfires, at least one of which was reported to have turned into a “firenado”. This rarely recorded phenomenon occurs when hot air from a fire on the ground rises in a tall column and starts to rotate in the winds higher off the ground, giving the appearance of a tornado mixed with fire.

The heatwave in the west of the US has also given rise to lightning storms which may start further wildfires, leading agencies in the region to put out warnings.

Persistent­ly high temperatur­es have been recorded in many areas of the northern hemisphere this summer, giving added weight to the prediction made earlier this year that it could be the hottest on record, as the Earth’s climate changes under human influence. Most concerning for climate scientists has been a “heatwave” recorded in the Arctic.

A record temperatur­e of 38C was observed in Siberia in June, with the Arctic sea ice shrinking to its lowest extent for 40 years in July. Siberian temperatur­es were more than 5C above average from January to June. New research has suggested that on current trends the Arctic could be ice-free in summer as soon as 2035.

 ?? Photograph: Steve Marcus/ Reuters ?? If the Death Valley temperatur­e is verified, it would beat the previous hottest August day for the United States.
Photograph: Steve Marcus/ Reuters If the Death Valley temperatur­e is verified, it would beat the previous hottest August day for the United States.

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