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Death Valley National Park has its hottest summer on record

Death Valley National Park has its hottest summer on record
So behind us, we have this uh displaced thermometer here at the Furnace Creek Visitor Center uh which is *** great place for people to take *** picture with and record *** bit of this memory of the extreme heat that they got to experience. This thermometer has *** probe in the back of it that includes *** little bit of radiant heat that's coming from the metal structure. And also the building, an official thermometer that would be set up by the National Weather Service will have specific parameters in order to make sure it doesn't pick up radiant heat. So this one usually displays *** couple degrees hotter than what the official temperature actually is. Yeah, we find that in the summertime, this is an incredibly popular place to be as you can see from the visitors behind me. So this thermometer has gone through *** number of different um chapters over time. Uh In 2020 we installed an upgrade that includes Celsius because we get so many international visitors. It's hard to uh to, to portray how hot it is um when you speak to people back home. So I mean, that's an indicator, isn't it take the picture. There's the temperature of 51 people. I don't know they might have been hot before, but 51 is really hot. *** couple of years back, we got this more modern equipment installed by the weather service. We have an automated sensor at Death Valley that's been in an enclosure behind the visitor center. The automated sensor that is our official temperature is, is, is cited so that it's got little influence from nearby equipment, nearby uh buildings and such. So we uh and we calibrate that we go out and we maintain it. I don't think you can work here in Death Valley and not get um interested in weather and just the fascinating just place in history that you have to be seen. Records get broken.
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Death Valley National Park has its hottest summer on record
One of the hottest places on Earth is getting even hotter.Death Valley National Park had its hottest meteorological summer (June-August) on record, with an average 24-hour temperature of 104.5°F, according to a National Park Service news release.That sustained scorcher surpasses the old record of 104.2°F, which was set in 2018 and then tied in 2021.Related video above: Different thermometers tell different stories about the heat in Death ValleyJuly created an ovenlike atmosphere when the park's weather station at Furnace Creek recorded its hottest month ever, the news release said. The park had nine straight days of 125° F or higher, and only seven days in total where temperatures did not reach 120° F. The highest temperature this summer was 129.2° F on July 7. But it wasn't the just the daytime that was sizzling.Not much relief at nightOvernight lows also played a big role in the extreme heat, NPS said.The average low temperature of 91.9° F meant there was little relief when the sun set. The temperature fell below 80° F only five times from June 1 to August 31, and there were nine days when overnight lows never fell below 100° F, the release said.Park rangers were called to numerous heat-related incidents, including two fatalities where heat was a contributing factor, the news release said. In another incident, a man had to be rescued from sand dunes after losing his flip flops and getting burns on his exposed feet.If you're planning a trip there soon, don't expect it to be exactly pleasant just because we're into September now. The park said you can expect triple-digit temperatures into early October.So caution is still the watchword."Visitors are advised to stay within a 10-minute walk of an air-conditioned vehicle, drink plenty of water, eat salty snacks, and wear a hat and sunscreen," the NPS release said.Death Valley is the lowest point in North America, where Badwater Basin sits at 282 feet below sea level and is covered in salt flats. That altitude (or lack thereof) contributes to the extreme heat. Hot air can't rise over the steep, high mountains surrounding the area, and it gets trapped in ultra-low valley.

One of the hottest places on Earth is getting even hotter.

Death Valley National Park had its hottest meteorological summer (June-August) on record, with an average 24-hour temperature of 104.5°F, according to a National Park Service news release.

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That sustained scorcher surpasses the old record of 104.2°F, which was set in 2018 and then tied in 2021.

Related video above: Different thermometers tell different stories about the heat in Death Valley

July created an ovenlike atmosphere when the park's weather station at Furnace Creek recorded its hottest month ever, the news release said. The park had nine straight days of 125° F or higher, and only seven days in total where temperatures did not reach 120° F.

The highest temperature this summer was 129.2° F on July 7. But it wasn't the just the daytime that was sizzling.

Not much relief at night

Overnight lows also played a big role in the extreme heat, NPS said.

The average low temperature of 91.9° F meant there was little relief when the sun set. The temperature fell below 80° F only five times from June 1 to August 31, and there were nine days when overnight lows never fell below 100° F, the release said.

Park rangers were called to numerous heat-related incidents, including two fatalities where heat was a contributing factor, the news release said. In another incident, a man had to be rescued from sand dunes after losing his flip flops and getting burns on his exposed feet.

If you're planning a trip there soon, don't expect it to be exactly pleasant just because we're into September now. The park said you can expect triple-digit temperatures into early October.

So caution is still the watchword.

"Visitors are advised to stay within a 10-minute walk of an air-conditioned vehicle, drink plenty of water, eat salty snacks, and wear a hat and sunscreen," the NPS release said.

Death Valley is the lowest point in North America, where Badwater Basin sits at 282 feet below sea level and is covered in salt flats. That altitude (or lack thereof) contributes to the extreme heat. Hot air can't rise over the steep, high mountains surrounding the area, and it gets trapped in ultra-low valley.