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How Hot Can It Get, Literally? Scientists Weigh In
Friday July 11, 2025. 08:40 PM , from Slashdot
![]() Scientists now focus on temperature departures from local averages rather than absolute readings. The most anomalously warm temperature was recorded in Antarctica, where temperatures rose 39C above average in March 2022. North Pole temperatures surged 20C higher than normal in February, reaching the melting point in winter. Research has identified five key factors that enable extreme heat: cloudless skies, high pressure, dark surfaces, lower altitudes, and lack of water. 'Basically all of these conditions are met in Death Valley, but not in many other places in the world,' said climate scientist Friederike Otto. Scientists insist that there are heat limits, though these upper bounds will rise with global warming, they caution. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://news.slashdot.org/story/25/07/11/1728246/how-hot-can-it-get-literally-scientists-weigh-in?ut...
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