Mexico burning! Life-threatening temperatures hitting 50 C (122 F) just 3.9 Celsius short of the hottest temperature ever recorded on our planet
1
June, 2018
A
heat wave in Mexico that has increased temperatures to 50 C (122 F)
in many areas has led authorities to declare a state of emergency,
the country's National Weather Service (SMN) said Thursday.
According
to the SMN, temperatures could rise to 50 C in the northern state of
Sinaloa, the western state of Michoacan and the central state of
Hidalgo, while temperatures in the rest of the country will exceed 30
C (113 F).
The
SMN recommended residents to stay alert to announcements made by the
National System of Civil Protection and by state and municipal
authorities, as well as to take preventative measures such as staying
hydrated and avoid excessive exposure to the sun.
Civil
Protection declared a state of emergency in numerous municipalities
throughout the country, allowing the use of federal funds to help
states and local authorities assist residents during the heat wave.
The
world's hottest ever temperature belongs to Death Valley at134.1
degrees (56.7 Celsius), set July 10, 1913, but Weather Underground
does not believe it is a credible measurement:
“The
record has been scrutinized perhaps more than any other in the United
States,”
“we
don’t have much more to add to the debate aside from our belief it
is most likely not a valid reading when one looks at all the
evidence.”
If
you discard the Death Valley record from 1913, the 129.2-degree F
(53.9 Celsius) reading from Mitribah June 2016 would tie the world’s
highest known temperature, also observed in Death Valley on June 30,
2013, and in Tirat Tsvi, Israel, on June 22, 1942.
But
Masters says the Israeli measurement is controversial.
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