Jul 28, 2018

The Big Wobble | Jul 28, 2018 | ~ Insane: 124.3 degrees F (51.3 Celsius) in Algeria is the hottest temperature ever recorded in Africa as the global heat wave continues ~ | Blogger: [❄️World on Fire - Record cold - Forest fires burn at 800°C (1472° F) to 1200°C (2192° F). Greece Attacked With Directed Energy Weapons (DEW) - Spot Fires. The melting process for glass, required a temperature closer to 2500 °F. Engine blocks - 2200° C whereas the melting point of aluminium is 659°, of iron is 1530°, of cast iron 1260°,of high carbon steel 1353° etc. 🔥] ... (Climate Change is Man Made.... by the Military Industrial Complex) ... Tropenætter i Danmark, hedebølgen fortsætter i hele august endnu, siger man. Svenskerne fjerner ilt fra skovbrande med jagerfly og bomber. Det er bevist, at militæret benytter sig af laserteknologi og Direct Energy Våben i Kalifornien, for at ANTÆNDE ild, nu også i Grækenland, siger nogle. Alaska har målt rekordhøje temperaturer. Hele centralafrika brænder. Japan har hedebølge, 50 dræbt, aldrig mål, nogensinde. Texas i USA, ligeledes hedebølge mens April slog rekorden for koldeste temperaturer i hele USA, hvordan kan det nu være!? ... |



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Insane: 124.3 degrees F (51.3 Celsius) in Algeria is the hottest temperature ever recorded in Africa as the global heat wave continues



The planet's hottest continent probably just endured its hottest weather ever reliably measured.
An Algerian city soared to 124.3 degrees (51.3 Celsius) Thursday, adding to the onslaught of records for extreme heat set around the planet during the past 10 days.
The blistering-hot temperature reading, observed in Ouargla, is probably the highest temperature ever reliably measured both in Algeria and in all of Africa.
The record was first identified by weather records expert Maximiliano Herrera.
Ouargla, with a population of nearly half a million, is located in north-central Algeria, roughly midway between Morocco and Tunisia.
Its 124.3-degree temperature surpassed Africa's previous highest reliable temperature measurement of 123.3 degrees (50.7 Celsius) set July 13, 1961, in Morocco.

According to the Guinness book of records, on 13 September 2012, the World Meteorological Organisation disqualified the record for the highest recorded temperature, exactly 90 years after it had been established at El Azizia, Libya, with a measurement of 58°C.
The official highest recorded temperature is now 56.7°C (134°F), which was measured on 10 July 1913 at Greenland Ranch, Death Valley, California, USA.
As a result of an investigation in 2012, the WMO concluded that the El Azizia record measurement could be inaccurate by as much as 7°C due to a combination of factors including the asphalt-like surface over which the measurement was taken, which is not a fair representation of the native desert soil.