This first United States county-by-county look at what climate change will do to temperature and humidity conditions in the coming decades finds few places that won’t be affected by extreme heat.
The NWS heat-index scale is a metric that combines temperature and humidity and is often called the “feels like” temperature. If that reaches 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius), our bodies begin to slowly heat up to the ambient temperature. The human body’s internal temperature likes to be between 98.6 to 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit (37 to 38 degrees Celsius); any warmer, and it’s a fever. If our internal temperature reaches 104 degrees, all-important cellular machinery starts to break down. This is extremely dangerous and requires immediate medical attention.
“We have little to no experience with ‘off-the-charts’ heat in the U.S.,” said Erika Spanger-Siegfried, lead climate analyst at UCS and report co-author. “Exposure to conditions in that range makes it difficult for human bodies to cool themselves and could be deadly,” Spanger-Siegfried said in a press release.
While the upper Midwest, Northeast, and Northwest are unlikely to experience off-the-charts heat, it will still be hotter, and people and infrastructure have little ability to cope with plus-100 degree Fahrenheit heat over multiple days, said Rachel Licker, senior climate scientist at UCS and report co-author. “The rise in days with extreme heat will change life as we know it nationwide,” Licker said in a press release.
Type your county into this tool to find out how hot it will be near you.
https://relay.nationalgeographic.com/pro...-americans
...Beware, Sacramento, El Paso, Kansas City, Omaha, St. Louis, Louisville, Nashville, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Dayton, Columbus (OH), Huntsville, Birmingham, Atlanta, Chattanooga, Knoxville, Greensboro, Winston-Salem, Raleigh, Charlotte, Spartanburg, Columbia, Charleston (WV or SC) , Jacksonville, Richmond, Norfolk, Washington, Baltimore...
The NWS heat-index scale is a metric that combines temperature and humidity and is often called the “feels like” temperature. If that reaches 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius), our bodies begin to slowly heat up to the ambient temperature. The human body’s internal temperature likes to be between 98.6 to 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit (37 to 38 degrees Celsius); any warmer, and it’s a fever. If our internal temperature reaches 104 degrees, all-important cellular machinery starts to break down. This is extremely dangerous and requires immediate medical attention.
“We have little to no experience with ‘off-the-charts’ heat in the U.S.,” said Erika Spanger-Siegfried, lead climate analyst at UCS and report co-author. “Exposure to conditions in that range makes it difficult for human bodies to cool themselves and could be deadly,” Spanger-Siegfried said in a press release.
While the upper Midwest, Northeast, and Northwest are unlikely to experience off-the-charts heat, it will still be hotter, and people and infrastructure have little ability to cope with plus-100 degree Fahrenheit heat over multiple days, said Rachel Licker, senior climate scientist at UCS and report co-author. “The rise in days with extreme heat will change life as we know it nationwide,” Licker said in a press release.
Type your county into this tool to find out how hot it will be near you.
https://relay.nationalgeographic.com/pro...-americans
...Beware, Sacramento, El Paso, Kansas City, Omaha, St. Louis, Louisville, Nashville, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Dayton, Columbus (OH), Huntsville, Birmingham, Atlanta, Chattanooga, Knoxville, Greensboro, Winston-Salem, Raleigh, Charlotte, Spartanburg, Columbia, Charleston (WV or SC) , Jacksonville, Richmond, Norfolk, Washington, Baltimore...
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