The mercury soared to 98 degrees Saturday afternoon in Downtown Los Angeles—shattering one of LA’s oldest daily heat records. CURBED — The previous record of 95 degrees was set 131 years ago in 1886. (Fun fact: Downtown LA’s longest-standing heat record is on March 28, when the temperature hit 90 degrees in 1879, according to the National Weather Service). Southern California is sweating through a heatwave brought on by a high pressure system hovering over the southwest United States. Temperatures picked up Thursday and really started to sizzle on Friday with more than a half-dozen new heat records set from Palm Springs to Woodland Hills. The Weather Service had forecast high temperatures on Saturday of up to 110 degrees in neighborhoods “away from the coast.” Temperatures closer to the beach were predicted in the 90s. Heat alerts have been issued for the San Fernando Valley, Pomona, and the Santa Clarita Valley, and public health officials are encouraging residents who don’t have air conditioning at home to head over to their nearest cooling center. Residents seeking relief might want to consider heading to the beach. The Weather Service says, “The coastal plains will see a strong difference between the beaches and a few miles inland, where temperatures could vary by more than 20 degrees.” Where did this extreme heat come from and when will it end? Here’s what you need to know: 1. When will temperatures peak? The mercury is forecast to soar to its highest point Saturday. 2. How hot will it get? Pretty hot. In the Valley, Woodland Hills and Burbank are expected to tie or break their heat records on Friday and Saturday, with temperatures of 112 and 104, respectively. UCLA is forecast to break its record, too, with two days of 94-degree temperatures expected on Friday and Saturday. The Weather Service accurately predicted that the record for Downtown Los Angeles would fall on Saturday. Its forecast a high of 96 degrees; it turned out to get even hotter than that. 3. What records have already been shattered?
The most wild record was notched Friday in Palm Springs, where the Weather Service recorded a high of 122 degrees. That smashed the record of 117 degrees set more than four decades ago in 1976. On Friday, the other notable one was at Pierce College in Woodland Hills, where the Weather Service recorded a high of 109 degrees, besting the 2006 high temperature of 108 degrees. 4. Is this normal? Bill Patzert, a climatologist for the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, tells the Los Angeles Times that Southern California’s warmest months are traditionally August and September, and that the heat waves are “definitely coming earlier this year.”
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