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trescenzi 1 days ago [-]
I was curious how extreme this was in comparison to the past. I grew up near Philly so I looked at the Mount Holly historical data set. Since 1996, that’s the cutoff of the data I found, there’s been 4 summers with two 100+ days in a row in them. Zero instances of three in a row. Honestly it’s rare enough I didn’t believe it had ever been over 100. But it does seem like it’s a once every 10 or so years event. I’d already made plans to go to Florida. I guess I’m going there to avoid the heat this year.
Disclaimer: not trying to make a climate statement here just genuinely curious.
rolph 1 days ago [-]
you should also cross index that with Relative Humidity, thats what will get you.
high humidity hinders evaporative cooling, and extremely low humidity is dessication. overheated core, vs dehydration
BugsJustFindMe 1 days ago [-]
I'm curious which years they were.
trescenzi 22 hours ago [-]
1999, 2006, 2010, 2011. There are others with multiple 100+ days but no others with 100+ in a row.
Disclaimer: not trying to make a climate statement here just genuinely curious.
high humidity hinders evaporative cooling, and extremely low humidity is dessication. overheated core, vs dehydration
This is the source: https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/cdo-web/search?datasetid=GHCND
Not all of the stations have temp data so make sure you pick one with what you want.
Hot summer weather is a UK tabloid perennial favorite, but obviously it hits a bit different here in the US when you've got A/C to go home to!