Heatwave breaks records in parts of US and Canada
From the BBC
23 July 2011
The mercury in Newark ,
New Jersey , reached 108F (42C) on
Friday, the highest ever recorded in the city. In Canada , an extreme heat alert
remained in effect, a day after two dozen cities and towns broke their previous
single-day heat records. At least 22 deaths have been blamed on the heat.
Across the US
alone, where nearly half of the population was under a heat advisory, more than
220 heat records have tumbled.
Many regions in the central US and parts of the eastern
seaboard have seen heat indexes - a combination of temperature and humidity -
topping 43C. Airports near Washington and Baltimore hit 40.5C (105F); Boston 39.5C (103F); Portland ,
Maine , and Concord ,
New Hampshire , 38.5C (101F); and Providence , Rhode
Island , 38C (100F). Philadelphia - where bathers at
public swimming pools were asked to leave every half hour to allow a new crowd
to enjoy a cooling dip - saw temperatures of 40C (104F). New York City also hit 40C, just a degree
short of its all-time high, although with the oppressive humidity, it felt like
45C (113F). As New Yorkers roasted in the heat, health officials warned them to
stay out of the water at four beaches on New York
Harbor after a sewage treatment plant
damaged by fire began pumping raw waste into the Hudson
River . Several hundred homes and businesses in New York were hit with temporary blackouts.
Voltage was reduced in several neighbourhoods in the city and suburbs to keep
underground cables from overheating.
On Friday, the medical examiner's office in Chicago listed heat stress
or heatstroke as the cause of death for seven people. An
18-year-old landscape gardener who died on Thursday night in Louisville , Kentucky ,
had a temperature of 43C (110F), a coroner said. In Canada ,
temperature records were broken in two dozen cities across Ontario
and Quebec on Thursday, including the hottest
ever July temperature in Toronto ,
at 37.9C (100.2F). Asphalt and concrete pavements and buildings in cities were
"re-radiating" the heat, forecasters said. Eli Jacks, a meteorologist
with the National Weather Service, told the BBC: "This is an exceptionally
strong ridge of high pressure that really has an exceptional scope and
duration." The combination of high heat and humidity make it hard for the
human body to cool itself - because sweat does not evaporate efficiently, he
added. Officials in the central state of Missouri
say 13 people have died, and there have also been fatalities in neighbouring Oklahoma , including a
three-year-old boy.
In the south, more than three-quarters of Texas is suffering from drought amid the
worst dry spell in the state for decades. High temperatures - the number one
weather-related killer in the US
- claim 162 lives on average in the country each year. The most severe heatwave
in modern North American history took place during theGreat Depression in 1936. The heat that summer was blamed
for more than 5,000 deaths in the US
and Canada .
[Oddly – or not – this is exactly as predicted by global
warming scientists. But no doubt there will be those who pass it off as a freak
event, though I have to wonder how many ‘freak’ events will have to occur
before people realise this is the new norm. Over here we’re having a rather
patchy, cool and wet summer. As much as we gripe about it I think I prefer this
weather to what large parts of the US are getting – especially as I
and many other people I know don’t have any air-con.]
2 comments:
We had a heat index yesterday of 108, we had one of 110 a week or so ago. Oh and the humidity is killer too! I'm staying inside as much as possible.
It sounds quite nasty from what I've been reading...
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