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People want to feel heat? wtf!

Author
Q 5
999 HOLDINGS LLC
#1 - 2013-07-01 19:08:21 UTC
The record heat in Death Valley turned the hot spot into a draw for the meteorologically curious — and brave.

According to the National Weather Service, Sunday's highest temperature was 129 degrees, making it the hottest June temperature ever recorded in the U.S. The soaring temperature also beat out the park's hottest temperature from last summer by one degree, according to park officials.

"It’s early for us to have these temperatures in June," said park spokeswoman Cheryl Chipman. "We hope getting to 129 this early in the season is not foreboding."

PHOTOS: Heat wave in the Southland

The National Weather Service’s mercury thermometer had indicated 128 degrees at 4 p.m. Sunday, matching the record for the hottest June day anywhere in the U.S.

More than 200 yards away, the National Park Service’s thermometer showed 129.9 degrees.

On Sunday, ravens huddled in the shadows of desert scrub, panting with their beaks open wide. The desert pupfish in Salt Creek swam for cover in the deeper, cooler pools near the stream's headwaters. A sign posted at the entrance to the Furnace Creek Golf Course said, "Closed at 12:30 p.m. due to extreme heat."

"Our main concern is safety," said Carole Wendler, interpretive park ranger. "We're advising visitors that this is not the weekend to go hiking."

But Jon Rice, 42, of Longmont, Colo., decided to run a mile in a heat-absorbing black Darth Vader costume replete with a large plastic black helmet. He was hoping to record the "hottest verified run" for Guinness World Records. Rice ran on the center white line of Highway 190 in the heart of Death Valley so his shoes wouldn't melt on the asphalt.

He described the experience as "abject pain. The first hundred yards are fine. The second hundred yards are all about, 'Gosh, what the heck was I thinking?" Finishing, he said, took "grim determination."

The uncertainty over the precise temperature measurement left a small crowd of visitors to the park’s headquarters sweating in anticipation —and frustration.

Park officials said the mercury thermometer offers the only official temperature reading. The delay in certifying the peak temperature came about because the 8 a.m. daily reading shows the highest temperature for the last 24 hours.

The highest temperature ever recorded on the planet was in Death Valley on July 10, 1913 — 134 degrees.

Death Valley will commemorate the 100th anniversary of that mark with a celebration next week.

I spent 3 years in that cht hole called the middle east, months of unceasing heat, I never ever care to live with that kind of heat ever!
Must be me but me thinks people don't do enough to fulfill and enrich their life, I don't want to feel uncomfortable because of bad weather that's at the bottom of a waste bin for me.
Tumahub
Sebiestor Tribe
Minmatar Republic
#2 - 2013-07-01 19:35:55 UTC
Quote:
Death Valley's Furnace Creek holds the record for the highest reliably reported air temperature in the world, 134 °F (56.7 °C) on July 10, 1913.


A little ways to go yet for the record.
Gallowmere Rorschach
The Scope
Gallente Federation
#3 - 2013-07-01 20:54:47 UTC
Tumahub wrote:
Quote:
Death Valley's Furnace Creek holds the record for the highest reliably reported air temperature in the world, 134 °F (56.7 °C) on July 10, 1913.


A little ways to go yet for the record.

But....but....global warming bro....oh wait.
Eurydia Vespasian
Storm Hunters
#4 - 2013-07-02 01:27:54 UTC
i like it hot.

totally prefer that to cold. being minnesotan i know a thing or two about cold. give me sweet heat over that garbage any day.
Tumahub
Sebiestor Tribe
Minmatar Republic
#5 - 2013-07-02 01:28:44 UTC
Gallowmere Rorschach wrote:
Tumahub wrote:
Quote:
Death Valley's Furnace Creek holds the record for the highest reliably reported air temperature in the world, 134 °F (56.7 °C) on July 10, 1913.


A little ways to go yet for the record.

But....but....global warming bro....oh wait.


This global warming?
Micheal Dietrich
Kings Gambit Black
#6 - 2013-07-02 01:52:29 UTC
Eurydia Vespasian wrote:
i like it hot.

totally prefer that to cold. being minnesotan i know a thing or two about cold. give me sweet heat over that garbage any day.


Same here. I'm in the northern part of the western desert so I get both worlds. Winter time we get below zero weather and layer upon layer of snow. And yesterday we had 110 degrees of dry heat. Everyone else is complaining but I love it.

We have acclimated chambers at work for testing in different 'weather' conditions. Technically we're supposed to only spend 15 minutes in the high heat high humidity chamber but personally I would move my cubicle in there if given half a chance.

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