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Today's Paper | May 09, 2024

Updated 18 Aug, 2020 10:53am

Temperature record set in California’s Death Valley

New York: A temperature of 130 degrees Fahrenheit (54.4 degrees Celsius) recorded in California’s Death Valley on Sunday by the US National Weather Service could be the hottest ever measured with modern instruments, officials say.

The reading was registered at 3:41pm at the Furnace Creek Visitor Center in the Death Valley national park by an automated observation system — an electronic thermometer encased inside a box in the shade.

In 1913, a weather station half an hour’s walk away recorded what officially remains the world record of 134 degrees Fahrenheit (56.7 degrees Celsius). But its validity has been disputed because a superheated sandstorm at the time may have skewed the reading.

The next highest temperature was set in July 1931 in Kebili, Tunisia, at 131 degrees Fahrenheit (55.0 degrees Celsisus) — but again, the accuracy of older instruments has been questioned by some weather historians.

In 2016 and 2017, weather stations in Mitribah, Kuwait and Turbat, Pakistan recorded temperatures of 129.2 degrees Fahrenheit (54 degrees Celsius). After evaluation by the World Meteorological Organisation both were downgraded by a few fractions of a degree.

The Geneva-based World Meteorological Organisation said on Monday it would start the process to verify the new US reading.

“This observed high temperature is considered preliminary and not yet official,” said the US National Weather Service.

Dan Berc, an official at the Las Vegas NWS office responsible for the site, said that the sensor would be brought in for evaluation. The investigation would take “at least a couple of months,” he said, adding: “Growing up as a kid, I thought 130 degrees Fahrenheit was a really cool record.” Validation isn’t a formality, and long-held records have been thrown out after modern evaluation.

For decades, the heat record was officially the 136.4 degrees Fahrenheit (58 degrees Celsius) recorded in 1922 in El Azizia, now modern Libya.

But a WMO panel that investigated it in detail between 2010 and 2012 stripped it of the title after finding multiple troubling aspects including a potential problem with the thermometers and an inexperienced observer.

The southwestern United States is currently enduring an intense heat wave, which scientists say are becoming more frequent and dangerous because of human-driven climate change.

Published in Dawn, August 18th, 2020

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