A city in Oman just posted the world’s hottest low temperature ever recorded: 109 degrees (42,6ºC)
Over a period of 24 hours, the temperature in the coastal city of Quriyat, Oman, never dropped below 108.7 degrees (42.6 Celsius) Tuesday, most likely the highest minimum temperature ever observed on Earth. For a location to remain no lower than 109 degrees around the clock is mind-boggling. In many locations, a temperature of 109 degrees even during the heat of the afternoon would be unprecedented. For example, in nearly 150 years of weather records, Washington, D.C.’s high temperature has never exceeded 106 degrees.Quriyat’s suffocating low temperature, first reported by Jeff Masters at Weather Underground, breaks the world’s previous hottest minimum temperature of 107.4 degrees (41.9 Celsius), also set in Oman, on June 27, 2011.
Masters received word of the exceptional temperature from weather records expert Maximiliano Herrera. Incredibly, the temperature in Quriyat, Masters said, remained above 107.4 degrees (41.9 Celsius) for 51 straight hours. Its blistering afternoon high temperature of 121.6 degrees (49.8 Celsius) Tuesday was just about two degrees shy of Oman’s all-time heat record and its highest June temperature, Masters reported.
Quriyat, sometimes also spelled Qurayyat, is a small fishing village in northeast Oman adjacent to the Gulf of Oman that spills into the Arabian Sea. The city’s population is just over 50,000, and it is about an hour southeast of Muscat, Oman’s capital.
This sweltering episode marked the second exceptional weather event to affect Oman in as many months. In May, Category 3 Tropical Cyclone Mekunu slammed into its southwest coast, making landfall near Salalah. It was the most intense tropical cyclone to make landfall on the Arabian Peninsula on record.
Tuesday’s record-breaking heat resulted from a strong high-altitude, high-pressure system or heat dome anchored over the region, which pumped air temperatures up to 15 degrees above normal. Masters said sea surface temperatures in the adjacent waters were about 90 degrees, keeping air temperatures elevated even through the night and offering no reprieve from the oppressive conditions.
Tuesday’s 109-degree low, while the highest known, is not official and remains unverified. Although the World Meteorological Organization validates and maintains records for the hottest maximum world temperature, it does not do so for minimum temperatures.
Nevertheless, assuming it is legitimate, this weather extreme adds to a tremendous number of hot-weather milestones established around the world in just over the past year, which include:
- In April, Pakistan posted the hottest temperature ever observed on Earth during the month of 122.4 degrees (50.2 Celsius).
- Dallas had never hit 90 degrees in November before, but it did so three times in four days in 2017.
- In late October 2017, temperatures soared to 108 degrees in Southern California, the hottest weather on record so late in the season in the entire U.S.
- On Sept. 1, 2017, San Francisco hit 106 degrees, smashing its all-time hottest temperature.
- In late July 2017, Shanghai registered its highest temperature in recorded history, 105.6 degrees (40.9 Celsius).
- In mid-July, Spain posted its highest temperature recorded when Córdoba Airport (in the south) hit 116.4 degrees (46.9 Celsius).
- In July 2017, Death Valley, Calif., endured the hottest month recorded on Earth.
- In late June 2017, Ahvaz, Iran, soared to 128.7 degrees Fahrenheit (53.7 Celsius) — that country’s all-time hottest temperature.
- In late May 2017, the western town of Turbat in Pakistan hit 128.3 degrees (53.5 Celsius), tying the all-time highest temperature in that country and the world-record temperature for May, according to Masters.
Bron: washingtonpost.com
A meteorological station in Qurayyat, Oman, recorded a NIGHT time temperature of 42.6°C (108.7°F) on 25 June. WMO Weather and Climate Extremes archive currently does not include highest minimum temperatures so can not confirm if this is a new world record. https://t.co/ahISo9OOCH pic.twitter.com/se0MQGq0Ex
— WMO | OMM (@WMO) 28 juni 2018
A low of 109°F?? If the data are confirmed, Tuesday's minimum temperature of 42.6°C (108.7°F) at Quriyat, Oman, is a new all-time world record https://t.co/skStu1W0ie pic.twitter.com/1OrRHF2hoY
— Weather Underground (@wunderground) 27 juni 2018
Volledige dagen met sneeuwdek: 7
Dagen met deels sneeuwdek: 2
Vaste sneeuw: 4 * Laatste 01-02-2019
Smeltende sneeuw: 1 * Laatste 02-02-2019
Hagel: 4
Velp 2018:
Smeltende sneeuw: 6
Vaste Sneeuw: 6
Hagel: 8
Weerlicht: 6
Onweer: 24 (1 onweersdag in Velp gemist toen ik in Duitsland was)
Velp 2017:
Dagen met sneeuwdek: 34 (waarvan 21 in januari, 6 in februari en 7 in december)
Vaste sneeuw: 12
Smeltende sneeuw: 6
Hagel: 13
Weerlicht: 6
Onweer: 21
Zo snel zal dat niet gaan. Het is echt de opwarming die veroorzaakt wordt door de mens. Vroeger in de tijd van de dinosaurussen was het klimaat tropisch wereldwijd en warmde de wereld langzaam op. Vandaag het geval is dat de mensheid op massale schaal fossiele brandstoffen verbrand die de opwarming veel sneller laat gebeuren. Vroeger waren het de vulkanen vandaar de trage opwarming, nu is het onze technologie die dat doet.
22 juli 2009
10 t/m 14 juli 2010
19 juni 2013, 27 juli 2013, 19 augustus 2013