The Earth is getting hotter. How heat domes, El Niño and greenhouse gases all play a part.



Record-high temperatures have been smashed in the U.S., and stretches of hot days have persisted longer than ever this July. These are more signs our planet is getting warmer, climate scientists say.

On Wednesday, Phoenix recorded its 20th consecutive day of temperatures above 110 degrees, further surpassing the 18 day-record set in 1974, according to the National Weather Service. Phoenix also set two more records:

  • The warmest low temperature for July 19, which was still 97 degrees.
  • Ten consecutive days when the low did not fall below 90 degrees.

Professor Paul Andrew Mayewski, director at the Climate Change Institute at University of Maine, and climatologist Sean Birkel, also at the Climate Change Institute, gathered National Weather Service data and, along with other outlets, generated global visualizations to show changes in the planet’s climate. Here’s how hot the globe was Tuesday.

Heat records around the world this week

Is climate change to blame for the heat wave?

Mayewski offers some insight: “July 4th-July 6th of this year we saw the largest daily global mean temperature increase on record for that day. There’s no doubt that the continents and the oceans are warming.”

He also has observed warming in the Arctic, where the extent of sea ice is one of the lowest on record.



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