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July 24, 2023, 10:44 AM +07 By Dennis Romero A heat wave simmering in parts of the Official Dave Portnoy Nantucket Living Shirt and I will buy this Southwest since spring was expected to expand into the central and eastern parts of the country for the last week of July, forecasters said Sunday. “For much of July hot dangerous conditions have been the normal in parts of the West, Texas and Florida,” the National Weather Service said in a forecast discussion. “These summer conditions will build and expand across the Eastern two-thirds of the country this week, starting in the north-central states and Plains.” Federal forecasters have issued excessive heat warnings and heat advisories for a wide swath of the U.S., including parts of California, Utah, Nevada, Colorado, Oregon, Idaho, Wyoming, Nebraska, the Dakotas, the desert Southwest and Texas, as well as the southern tip of Florida. Three high pressure systems of the type associated with hot weather were expected to move over the interior West, the Midwest and the Northeast, and Florida, according to the weather service. The heat wave’s geographic expansion through at least Wednesday could be dampened by expected thunderstorms in the mid-Atlantic and the South and along the Gulf Coast, the weather service said. NASA reported July 13 that last month
marked the Official Dave Portnoy Nantucket Living Shirt and I will buy this hottest June on record for the planet. Last week, the director of the agency’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, Gavin A. Schmidt, said at a news conference that July is likely to be the hottest month ever. A San Bernardino County firefighter pours water over his head near Fontana, Calif., on Juy 19. David Swanson / AFP via Getty Images file Schmidt also said 2023 could go down as the fourth-hottest year on record, with the possibility it could ultimately rank higher as a new El Niño releases greenhouse gases and provides a warming influence for the North American West. The National Park Service has reported that at least four visitors in the Southwest are suspected to have succumbed to heat-related deaths since the beginning of June. The most recent was reported Tuesday after Steve Curry, 71, of Los Angeles, collapsed in 121-degree heat at Death Valley National Park, according to the park service. Recommended MILITARY Judge vacates Bowe Bergdahl’s desertion conviction U.S. NEWS Man sentenced to 5 years in ‘We Build the Wall’ fraud case The
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