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US West swelters in record-busting heat, risking wildfires

US West swelters in record-busting heat, risking wildfires

Families beat the heat in the calm and shallow waters of Squirrel Creek Tuesday afternoon, Jun 15, 2021, in Western Gateway Park in Penn Valley, Calfornia. (Photo: Elias Funez/The Union via AP)

PHOENIX: Dangerous, record-busting heat spread across the US Southwest on Tuesday (Jun 15) and into parts of Utah, Montana and Wyoming as a dome of high pressure hovered over a large swath of the region, intensifying the risk for wildfires amid a long-running drought.

Some of the highest temperatures were seen in bone-dry Arizona, where the National Weather Service forecast a record high of 117 degrees Fahrenheit (47 degrees Celsius) in Phoenix. The previous high for the date was 115 degrees Fahrenheit  (46 Celsius), set in 1974.

“It is kind of early to see temperatures this high, that's for sure,” said Marvin Percha, senior forecaster at the weather service's Phoenix office.

Percha said the high pressure dome combined with the land's lack of moisture caused by extreme drought has combined to create blistering heat expected throughout the entire week.

“What is unusual is the strength and the duration” of the high pressure system, he said.

The temperatures in Phoenix also could break records the rest of the week, with highs expected to reach 116 on Wednesday and 118 on Thursday and Friday.

The excessive heat stretched from southeast California across Arizona and Nevada and into New Mexico, where a high of 103 degrees Fahrenheit (39 degrees Celsius) on Monday at Albuquerque’s airport set a record. It was expected to hit near that Tuesday.

For the second day in a row, Salt Lake City set a heat record, hitting 105 degrees Fahrenheit on Tuesday, according to the weather service. That also tied the all-time hottest temperature ever recorded in the month of June. On Monday, Utah's capital reached 103 degrees Fahrenheit  to break a heat record for that date set nearly 50 years ago.

Temperatures in the Las Vegas area also were rising toward possible records during what the weather service was calling the hottest spell in decades.

“It’s just going up from here,” said meteorologist Ashley Nickerson of the weather service’s Las Vegas office.

Tuesday’s high temperature at Las Vegas' McCarron International Airport was expected to reach 113 degrees Fahrenheit  (45 degrees Celsius).

Rising temperatures were worsening the risk for wildfires in Montana and northern Wyoming, officials said. Forecasters said the highs Tuesday could approach 110 degrees Fahrenheit  (43 degrees Celsius) in portions of eastern Montana, shattering decades-old records. A daily record of 103 degrees Fahrenheit  (39 degrees Celsius) was set Monday in Billings.

Strong winds with gusts up to 35 miles per hour were expected, threatening to stir up wildfires already burning and make it hard to stamp out new blazes.

A wildfire that broke out Monday near Yellowstone National Park in Montana grew quickly overnight and had burned more than 8 square kilometres by Tuesday morning, news station KULR-TV reported. Homeowners in the area were told they could be asked to evacuate if conditions worsened.

The heat wave hit at the start of the Southwest's annual monsoon season, which runs Tuesday through Sep 30 and is supposed to be the region's rainy period, often contributing as much as 60 per cent of the annual precipitation.

But last year’s monsoon was the driest in recorded history, with an average of just 4 centimetres of rain in Arizona.

Percha, the forecaster in Phoenix, said June is Arizona's driest month and that the state doesn't usually start seeing some rain until early July.

Source: AP

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