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- In the summer of 1936, temperatures across the United States and Southern Canada reached record highs, many of which have not been broken to this day. Crops died from the heatwave, and so did many people — 5,000 of them, in fact, in a time before air conditioning was widespread.
www.farmersalmanac.com/heatwave-1936
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The 1936 North American heat wave was one of the most severe heat waves in the modern history of North America. It took place in the middle of the Great Depression and Dust Bowl of the 1930s and caused more than 5,000 deaths.
Nov 6, 2023 · Summer 1936 was unusually warm, especially with arid conditions in the Great Plains and Midwest exacerbating the heat. Many of the high temperature records set that year in the region still hold...
Jul 15, 2024 · 1936 heat records. The heat was especially brutal during July and August 1936, as chronicled in detail by extreme weather historian Christopher Burt in a 2018 write-up at Weather Underground. Dozens of U.S. states and cities set all-time high temperatures (i.e., the highest readings ever officially observed at a given site).
- A Summer of Extremes
- Canada
- Heat-Related Fatalities During The Summer of 1936
- What Caused The Anomalous Heat During The Summer of 1936?
The climatological summer (June-August) of 1936 remains the warmest nationwide on record (since 1895) with an average temperatureof 74.0°F. (The second warmest summer was that of 2012 with an average of 73.7°F.) July 1936 is still the single warmest U.S. month ever measured, with an average temperature of 76.8°F beating out July 2012 by just 0.02°F...
The plains of Manitoba and portions of southwestern Ontario also experienced some of their hottest temperatures ever observed. Winnipeg, the capital of the province of Manitoba, reached an all-time high of 108°F (42.2°C) on July 11. (The Fahrenheit reading serves as the official record, because in 1936 Canada still measured its temperatures in Fahr...
It is not known how many such deaths occurred in the U.S. over the course of this long hot summer. The international disasters database EM-DATlists the North American heat wave of 1936 as the sixth deadliest heat wave in modern world history. EM-DAT’s Ten Deadliest Heat Waves in World History 1) Europe, 2003: 71,310 2) Russia, 2010: 55,736 3) Europ...
Many people have wondered just why the temperatures reached such anomalous heights that summer. There was no La Niña event (which often results in summer heat waves in the U.S.), according tohistorical analysis of such. The Pacific Decadal Oscillation was in a strongly positive mode, according to NOAA. One widely accepted theory is that the Dust Bo...
Jun 18, 2024 · By the time cool air from Canada’s Hudson Bay arrived to relieve the baking Upper Midwest in July 1936, the United States had sweat through a torrid heat spell that stretched to New York.
Several factors led to the deadly heat of July 1936: A series of droughts affected the U.S. during the early 1930s. The lack of rain parched the earth and killed vegetation, especially across the Plains states.
Jul 20, 2022 · The killer U.S. heat wave of 1936 spread as far north as Canada, led to the heat-related deaths of an estimated 5,000 people, sent thermometers to a record 121 degrees Fahrenheit in...