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California's Death Valley crosses 53° Celsius as blistering heat wave continues (hindustantimes.com)
33 points by Brajeshwar on July 17, 2023 | hide | past | favorite | 79 comments


There was a doozy record heatwave in 1936 in North America:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1936_North_American_heat_wave

That year, North Dakota hit a record high of 121 five months after its record low of -60.


It's fascinating that some people are willing to drive to Death Valley for the social media clout of being burned alive.


Wait until you read about the Badwater 135 https://www.badwater.com/event/badwater-135/


Geeze. I get winded and overheated from my 0.02 mile trek to the mailbox. I can maybe do 100 miles on a good day... in my car. When the air conditioner's working.

How do people do it?! 'Tis cray cray. Next you're going to tell me there's a lava surfing competition.


> How do people do it?!

They slowly work up to it. The Death Valley portion of the race is tough but it's largely about managing pace, hydration, and electrolyte intake.

Note that the record pace for the Badwater 135 is on the order of 11 minutes, compared to something like the Ironman where the running pace record is 6 minutes over 26 miles. It's definitely a slower race because of the desert and mountain portions.

Oh and many runners hallucinate. If it's a good trip, that probably helps.


I once ran 2 miles in 40 minutes in 60F degree weather. It broke some muscle or another and took two months to recover, lol. Humans are so crazy adaptable. Some humans.


Years ago there was a documentary with some guy (a developer iirc) was preparing for badwater, it involved going running in the summer heat with winter gear on. He did manage to finish the race though!


Right, this is “fun” right up until your car overheats.


I know someone who ran it on one kidney and, the first time, the support car broke down around 90 miles, so the organizers were forced to stop her...

The previous year, she had had to bail out one week before the race in order to donate the other kidney. Yes, later she did eventually run it and finish it.


Training, acclimatization, and adaptation. Probably not much different from any other endurance-oriented athletic pursuit.


2000 burpees a day in the sauna, a treadmill in the steam room, and a firetruck full of Gatorade ought to do it...


How do they do it?

Some people get strong and fit. It's a hobby.


I’m dying to go to Death Valley, but post it live? Never.


I've been in death valley at 121F for hours at a time outside. So long as you have a hat, hydration and salty snacks it is surprisingly bearable. I would rather have that than even 85F with 100% humidity any day.


I don't get why you're downvoted.

Let's look at the data, and use this calculator: https://www.weather.gov/epz/wxcalc_rh

Death Valley: https://forecast.weather.gov/MapClick.php?lat=36.448&lon=-11...

Temperature = 117F.

Humidity = 11%.

Barometric pressure is broken but we'll use the Vegas Int'l airport value: 29.89in. (play with the value, it barely makes a dent).

Plug it in the calc and observe: Wet bulb is 73.69F.

Now we go to Miami: https://forecast.weather.gov/MapClick.php?lat=25.7748&lon=-8...

Temperature = 78F. Humidity = 79%. Barometric pressure: 30.07in

Plug it in the calc and observe: Wet bulb is 73.05F. Not even a degree less.

So yea, as long as I have water I prefer Death Valley.

Does make you wonder, being from Europe I haven't met many people who understand humidity.


They feel very different to me. I grew up in the desert not too far from Death Valley and have been outside many times when it was ~120°F / ~10% RH. And I've experienced 90+°F / 90+% RH on the east coast of the US several times.

Wet heat feels like it's going to wear me down until I collapse. It also feels disgusting to me - I remember leaving my hotel in Manhattan at 4 am when it was 85° and foggy. It felt bad through every one of my senses.

Dry, extreme heat feels like being burned to me. It never felt like it would wear me down as fast (maybe because I grew up with it?), but it felt like my skin might dry up and slough off. And my lungs might dry up as well. I always had nose bleeds because of the dryness.

I think which is worse is quite personal. But "feels like" temps or wet bulb temps don't tell the entire story. They feel completely different to me.

Oh, and I only drive white cars now, even though I no longer live in the desert. My first car was a dark navy blue and that car was brutal when it was 115+°F out. It had A/C, but it couldn't keep up at all. Keeping a white towel in the car was a must because on hot summer days I couldn't touch the steering wheel without the towel if it had been sitting in the sun for any length of time (and there isn't much shade around). When getting out of the car, spread the towel across the seat to keep the seat under 140°F when you return. I didn't get much sympathy from my future wife - neither her car nor her childhood home had A/C.


To me it feels like a (proper) Finnish sauna.

Now that I live in Phoenix I tell my friends in Belgium: Go bake a cake. Now open the oven when it's on its highest temperature. That's how it feels... for 3 months.

I love it.


And a viable way to get to safety, including a full tank of gas, spare tire, and more water than you'd think.


127.4° F


In this day and age, we might as well use a simpler, binary measurement for temperature.

It could toggle between "brr, I miss wildfires" and "so this is what it feels like to touch the sun". Who needs the in-between numbers anymore?


Celsius works well for that.

0 is where water freezes.

100 is where water boils.

50 is the temperature where healthy people outside will die if they stay out more than a hour or two.

Humidity and altitude affect these numbers, but handy for reference.


In other news, it's hot in July, especially in the desert.


I’m a little perplexed by the heat wave coverage of late.

I get that there are a lot of places that are experiencing unprecedented temperatures for uncommon lengths of time.

But a lot of the headlines, like this one, are broadcasting pretty normal temps for their places. Phoenix is having a a pretty normal Phoenix summer. So is Death Valley.

Both may be hotter than they were 100 years ago, and both may be seeing consecutive 100F days for longer than they’d seen 30 years ago, but the current temps aren’t particularly comparable with respect to places like southern Europe which are seeing things they’re not used to seeing.

There a story there, but not the ones the MSM keep pushing.

EDIT: I’m not disputing that Phoenix is hot and getting hotter (I graduated high school and college there and visit family there every year), nor am I disputing climate change. But the focus on heat in Phoenix is a little misplaced relative to the extremes happening elsewhere. Phoenix is having an incremental increase to its norms, per:

“There are days when the mercury climbs to well over 100 degrees Fahrenheit (38 degrees Celsius) in the summer here. But over the past two weeks, the mercury has hit 110 degrees F (43 C) or higher every afternoon, a streak of extreme temperatures that could stretch into next week, breaking Phoenix's 1974 record of 18 consecutive days, forecasters say.”

https://www.reuters.com/world/us/summer-tested-phoenix-brave...

Phoenix set heat records a long time ago (even before adding millions of people and the houses, offices, roadways, and parking lots that were built for them).

There are places in the world right now seeing temperatures they’ve never seen before. I think there’s a difference between the phenomena.


Phoenix is having anything but a normal summer.

The beginning was was cooler. Now it's way hotter than normal and breaking records for consecutive days.

The humidity is so high we should be in monsoon season, but it's so hot there is no cloud formation.

I don't watch the MSM, and I don't know what they are pushing, but it's absolutely no where near a normal Summer in Phoenix.

Edit: Evidence from NWS

The record longest number of days in a row with low temps in the 90s in Phoenix has been reached at 8 days! The low this morning at Sky Harbor was 95 degrees which breaks the previous record warm low of 93 degrees.

Another hot day (and week) ahead, with today expected to tie the record for Phoenix of most consecutive days of high temperatures reaching or exceeding 110 degrees at 18 days.


116-118F is pretty normal summer temps for Phoenix wrt “heat wave”. Not sure how this in dispute.


FWIW, it's only mid July. Not the hottest part of the year typically. Yet we're hitting historical records.

The thing I'm concerned about is that it is likely going to get even hotter.

What happens if - when - we see rolling power outages required to support the increased power demands is an open question.

Historical graph of sea temperatures (since energy in the sea goes into the atmosphere) for giggles: https://climatereanalyzer.org/clim/sst_daily/


A few days having that temperature in a row is normal. this many is not.

If you're not sure how it's in dispute, the fact it's records is the reason. Records dispute normal.


Sure you have records which compare the current facts with historical facts to see if what Phoenix is currently experiencing is normal or not. But the person you're replying to has anecdotes about how it's hot in the summer in Phoenix.

So we are at a stalemate it seems :P


Overnight temperatures well into the 90's for multiple days in a row is not "normal summer temps".


53° C (127.4° F) is extreme, even for Death Valley. We're rapidly approaching the point where larger and larger areas will be uninhabitable for humans, not just uncomfortable.


> 53° C (127.4° F) is extreme, even for Death Valley.

This. And we're not even in the hottest part of the year yet. I'd like to see the wet bulb temperatures too, but I'm guessing they're in the low 70's because of their low humidity. So it's technically possible for humans to survive that level of heat there given enough water and shade, though we'd probably see deaths in the eldest and youngest populations regardless.

But should you move the location much in any direction, and you'd have conditions which would require artificial cooling for any human to survive.


Do you consider an area uninhabitable if it requires artificial measures to survive there?


I think that's all of Earth when it comes to a population of give or take 10 billion people. It really feels like all the stuff that people said wasn't sustainable when I was a kid wasn't sustainable and it's all starting to come apart.


I don't know what you mean by "sustainable". I look around and I see people are fatter and richer than ever before.


Sustainable means "we could keep doing it this way indefinitely" and the answer...no, we absolutely cannot keep doing it (i.e. producing energy) this way indefinitely. It never was sustainable, we just live in a system with a huge amount of inertia and big reservoirs that allows us to imagine things are sustainable when they aren't.


Since the Earth is finite every use of raw materials is unsustainable eventually. That's not something I worry about because costs will shift around and new ways to meet needs will be found.


The Earth is finite, but it is not a closed system. This is how solar, wind, tidal, and hydro are able to work: The Sun. Aside from that, it's that whole "matter neither created no destroyed but merely changing forms."

The difference with fossil fuels, overfishing the oceans, etc. is as was mentioned earlier, the huge reservoir of stored energy we've been consuming without replenishing, extending beyond fish populations' ability to reproduce and the system's ability to absorb excess CO2.

We can be sustainable on a finite planet as long as we find the balance, which means dramatically changing the way we interact with our world: dramatically less fossil fuels converted to greenhouse gases and sustainable fisheries that protect breeding grounds (for example).


And yet life on Earth has managed to carry on for 3.7 billion years. How?

Recycling. The answer is recycling.

> That's not something I worry about

Oh, we know. There are plenty of people thoughtlessly devouring irreplaceable things, consuming the habitat of life's creatures, and farting up a literal shit storm of carbon waste. Such people make lousy neighbors and their unsustainable habits are going away, one way or another. "Yeah I don't care about that" isn't nearly the burn you might think it is.


And I suppose you devour nothing irreplaceable, consume no part of nature's habitat and create minimal carbon waste? Anyone can criticize others for their supposedly evil habits, but then somehow be utterly blind to how their own are similar or the same in substance, if not in superficial form. At the very least, you own and use a laptop or mobile device, since you're commenting here. Any idea how much colossal mining is needed to manufacture both?


What a rude statement.


A wooden tool will be decomposed and the material content will be part of other living things. An iron tool can also be recast.

Burning up trapped carbon that slowly accumulated underneath for millions of years in a hundred years is definitely not anything like the above.


> costs will shift around

This is the fundamental failure of capitalism: there is no market for global climate change, because humans have trouble en masse thinking in terms longer than a human lifetime. We're living on credit when the bill due will be paid by our children or grandchildren. It's not immediate and we mistake that for not being urgent. "Costs will shift around" falls down when large areas of the planet reach 150+ degrees and aquatic populations collapse. Then you're not simply paying in dollars. You're paying in refugees, water rights, food rationing, war, disease, etc.

"Disease? What?" Yep, just think of all of those cities at higher altitudes. Most were established at altitudes where biting insects that carry diseases don't propagate. Heat up the planet, and all of those disease vectors move up with the expanded heat envelope.

Compound interest is a real monster, and far too many of us refuse to look beyond the current balance sheet, expecting to pay just what they see today, not what the bill will look like a year from now.


I guess it depends where you live. I see record numbers of unhoused people and young adults living with their parents into their 30s.


You have to consider what would happen if power went out. If everyone for whom power went out dies within a few hours, then yes, I would consider it uninhabitable without extraordinary means of ensuring that the power can't go out (see, for example, the measures taken at south pole bases to ensure power continuity).

Power outages are inevitable, and above a certain wet bulb temperature you can't hydrate or shade yourself out of overheating. It's a when you'll die, not if.


Not really a great measure. If you remove the artificial from the world entirely, most people would be dead inside of a month.


If it's hot and humid (a wet-bulb temperature above body temperature) and you lose power, you're dead within hours, not months. You can't hydrate or shade to cool yourself sufficiently in those conditions.


Sure, there are places that would kill people quicker than others, but that's not what we're talking about here, we're talking about the benchmark of survivability without artificial means.

Truthfully, as a species, most of us require artificial augmentation in order to survive, which makes that artificial augmentation a poor benchmark for survivability.


Our ancestors' survival in Africa, Siberia, and pretty much every place in between gives lie to the notion that "most of us require artificial augmentation in order to survive".

And to be clear, no, I do not consider the use of fire, animal skins, etc. to be artificial augmentation. I do consider electricity and inter-continental supply lines to be artificial augmentation.


Right, so, do you know how to hunt? Can you start a fire without matches? Ever skin an animal?

I can do 1/3 there, only because of years in boyscouts, and there's no way in hell I'd survive without artificial augmentation, regardless of where you put me, I'm simply not prepared for it, same as almost everyone else.

If you're not basically the primative technology guy from youtube, very slim odds you'd figure it out quickly enough.


I don’t know, sure plenty would die, but I’m hell of a lot more likely to re-discover how to hunt and cook it on fire vs building a goddamn air-conditioner, and the two is not even comparable.


> We're rapidly approaching the point where larger and larger areas will be uninhabitable for humans, not just uncomfortable

This is hyperbole. Unaided? Sure. But few in the developed world bear these conditions without access to air conditioning.


This is not hyperbole. We are already seeing heat indexes above 160 degrees. Even if everyone in these areas had air conditioning or heat pumps—which they don't—it's far more likely a power grid failure will rear its ugly head with all of them turned on to the max. There's also livestock and crops to consider. Do they have air conditioning too?

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/capital-weather-gang/wp/...

Remember, solar can't keep up with that due to the solar constant and cell efficiency dropping with extreme heat. Even fossil fuels can't track as well because they're governed by Carnot efficiency where the cold sink is largely affected by ambient temperatures.

The world is heating up, and there only needs to be a few days at 160 to kill all the cows, goats, chickens, start fires, and overwhelm the power grid. In the past few years we've seen the old and vulnerable die in European summers. As it gets hotter, the threshold for "vulnerable" expands to include larger and larger portions of the population.

Pretending the problem doesn't exist or is not going to be serious will not help anyone.


There's a lot of people living without air conditioning, in the developed world or otherwise. They also tend to be in many of the hotter and poorer areas around the equator. It's not a good combo :/


What would be an example of a large area that will be uninhabitable for humans soon?


(Not the OP) "Uninhabitable" is a vague word, but I found it useful to think about this in terms of global stability. The US Dept. of Defense (not a traditionally environmentalist group, though perhaps traditionally alarmist) did a series of studies on this. Here's a recent summary: https://media.defense.gov/2021/Oct/21/2002877353/-1/-1/0/DOD...

Basically habitability and stability isn't just a matter of "will this land burn you alive" but also access to cropland and rangeland, clean water, or avoiding negatives like increased hurricanes and wildfires, or simply floods and droughts. Migration out of increasingly harsh areas is expected to fuel global instability, across large regions of the world at a time, often in some of the most populous or contentious areas.

While the DoD's regional analyses aren't released to the public, there are similar studies in academia... https://scholar.google.com/scholar_url?url=https://par.nsf.g... (that one does go into detailed definitions of habitability).

Basically the hot and humid areas of the world, like Southeast Asia and Sub Saharan Africa, are expected to spawn a lot of climate refugees.

I believe more detailed models are out there, but I haven't looked too deep.


For the right definitions of "soon" and "uninhabitable" most of the Indian subcontinent and south east Asia.


I would like to know what the right definitions you have in mind are.



With only a little bit of snark: if you listen to insurers that would be Florida.


A large part of the inhabited world is absolutely uninhabitable for humans without the aid of technology, due to the cold. I'm no fan of extreme heat, but people come up with solutions for any environment.


It’s much easier to heat something than to cool it. You can build a fire without any technology at all, but you can’t do anything about unsurvivable heat without a working power grid.


It takes a lot less energy to cool down a dwelling than it does to heat it, due to the delta between the inside/outside being a lot lower when it's too hot vs when it's too cold (Which can easily go into the negatives).

Sure, it takes no technology to start a fire in an emergency, but that can't be done at a mass scale for non-emergency habitability without making the problem worse in the long run. AC can run from the very same energy that's heating up a dwelling, and power grids will need to be adjusted to incorporate more clean power sources.


> It takes a lot less energy to cool down a dwelling

...only in low humidity. Also, PV solar efficiency drops quite a bit as the temperature goes up. Carnot efficiency also drops noticeably as your cold sink, the ambient environment around you, heats up.

Are you going to provide AC to all the livestock and crops as well? Because they're kind of important in the long run too.


Running AC lowers the dwelling humidity, so I'm not sure what you're referring to. Lower PV efficiency means some margin/overcapacity will be needed, not free but also not an insurmountable problem either. There's more energy being cast upon earth every single day than we'll ever need, and the same cannot be said for hydrocarbons.

Temperature control for livestock applies to cold climates too, so kind of a moot point to mention one and not the other.

Running AC in hot areas does not necessitate making climate change worse. Heat pumps are very efficient in cold climates too, but it doesn't change the fact that much more energy is required due to the temperature deltas being dealt with.


Heating is much easier, but in the right conditions you can still do a lot without power.

- The simplest is just having thermal mass to average day and night temperature. As long as the night is cold enough you can just stay in a brick or clay building with thick walls, preferably painted white.

- If you want to get a bit more advanced, you can use evaporative cooling, like Persian Yakhchāls [1].

- If you go high-tech, certain paints can cool surfaces down by a couple degrees (by radiating heat at frequencies that don't get absorbed by the atmosphere, thus breaking the equilibrium between heat absorption and heat emission).

Of course there is a point where those fail. Evaporative cooling is dependent on a low wet-bulb temperature and fails quickly in humid climate. Thermal mass needs temperature differences. Paints only buy you a couple degrees. In contrast an AC can be scaled to much higher temperatures.

1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yakhch%C4%81l


Right, but we're talking about being extremely close to the point where these will fail due to unsurvivable wet bulb temperatures


Your comment is 5 parents deep and not one mentions wet bulb until you just now. The wet bulb temp of Death Valley is in the 70s or 80s. Hardly unsurvivable wet bulb temperatures.


Death Valley is also a bit of an outlier in it's dryness. Of course, that's what also makes it a desert.

It wouldn't take much humidity to turn those temperatures into wet-bulb of 100+ - fatal to humans. Expanding the area of this level of heat a couple of hundred miles in any direction would probably be enough.



> Right, but we're talking about being extremely close to the point where these will fail due to unsurvivable wet bulb temperatures

I'm not sure who we is, and it wasn't clear anyone was talking about wet bulb temperatures. It's a comment on an article about Death Valley. At this point, you're just responding with things completely unrelated(behind paywalls).


Because Death Valley is our local bellwether for where heat extremes are headed. The issues of soaring temperatures will affect far more than Death Valley, especially where the humidity is much higher.


You're using the word soaring with Death Valley that has a long history of 50C+ temperatures. It may be more frequent, but hardly soaring. I'm not sure what local is in this context either, but Death Valley has a particular geography that helps it reach such high temperatures that aren't present in the surrounding areas. If you're worried about people living in this region, then looking at Death Valley isn't a good indicator. There is a long history of farming less than 100 miles away and that really isn't threatened.


Not dismissing your overall point (it's certainly easier to just combust something for heat) but it's not strictly true that you can't cool without electricity. There are techniques both modern and ancient that can help, though sadly most structures aren't built this way:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passive_cooling?wprov=sfla1

Where it gets really problematic is places that used to have a moderate climate (vs always having been hot) so the people and structures have no adaptations for the sudden extreme heat.


Yes, you can absolutely (and we will have to) mitigate hot temperatures with building design, but only up to the point where you have wet bulb temperatures >35C over several days. There are heavily populated areas that are in real danger of having something like that happening, and this is what that would look like: https://www.orbitbooks.net/orbit-excerpts/the-ministry-for-t...


Sure you can; you can tunnel a few feet underground.


Not if the air that you need to breathe has a wet bulb temperature >35C


Not gonna happen in Death Valley


And yet a LOT more people die every year due to cold than due to heat.


The coverage is strange as the reason Death Valley is so hot is due to its particular geography. With Telescope Peak at 11,000 feet on one side of the valley and a steep drop to Badwater below sea level the hot air is unable to escape/disperse and is instead repeatedly heated like an oven. Panamint Springs in the neighboring Panamint Valley is not nearly as hot.




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