World's Worst Heatwave – The Marble Bar heatwave, 1923-24

With all the caterwauling over the record heat in Moscow over a few days due to a blocking high pressure zone, it would seem valuable to revisit a truly exceptional historical heatwave that occurred long before “global warming” became a buzzword.

From The Australian Bureau Of Meteorology, something the Aussies might remember and remind their MP’s of, given the recent downfall of labor to the climate policies they are pushing. It is still a stalemate, but it’s down to a few people.

From Wikipedia: The record for the longest heat wave in the world is generally accepted to have been set in Marble Bar in Australia, where from October 31, 1923 to April 7, 1924 the temperature broke the 37.8 °C (100.0 °F) benchmark, setting the heat wave record at 160 days.

CO2 was 305 ppm at the time. Imagine the press coverage if this happened now. From The Australian Bureau Of Meteorology:

The Marble Bar heatwave, 1923-24

source: http://www.bom.gov.au/lam/climate/levelthree/c20thc/temp1.htm

Temperature chart

“Day by day maximum temperatures at Marble Bar over the period 31 October 1923 to 7 April 1924. At the peak of the heatwave – between late December and late February – many days approached or exceeded 45°C”.

The world record for the longest sequence of days above 100°Fahrenheit (or 37.8° on the Celsius scale) is held by Marble Bar in the inland Pilbara district of Western Australia. The temperature, measured under standard exposure conditions, reached or exceeded the century mark every day from 31 October 1923 to 7 April 1924, a total of 160 days.

Temperatures above 100°F are common in Marble Bar and indeed throughout a wide area of northwestern Australia. On average, Marble Bar experiences about 154 such days each year. The town is far enough inland that, during the summer months, the only mechanisms likely to prevent the air from reaching such a temperature involve a southward excursion of humid air associated with the monsoon trough, or heavy cloud, and/or rain, in the immediate area. This may sometimes be associated with a tropical cyclone or a monsoon low. In the record year of 1923-24 the monsoon trough stayed well north, and the season was notable for its lack of cyclone activity. (In fact, the entire Australian continent was untouched by tropical cyclones throughout the season, a rare event in the 20th Century). The rainfall recorded at Marble Bar during the record 160 days was just 79 mm, most of it in two heavy, short-lived storms that developed after the heat of the day. Only a further 12 mm of rain fell before the following December. Severe drought prevailed across the Western Australian tropics, and stock losses were heavy. With no rain to speak of, and minimal cloud, there was nothing to relieve day after day of extreme heat.

The highest temperature recorded during the record spell was 47.5°C on 18 January 1924. There have been higher temperatures at Marble Bar, with the highest recorded being 49.2°C, on 11 January 1905 and again on 3 January 1922. But temperatures in other Western Australian towns have been higher: in a remarkable late-season heat-wave in February 1998, Mardie recorded a maximum of 50.5°C (on the 19th) – the highest temperature in Western Australia, and the second highest ever recorded in Australia using standard instrumentation (Oodnadatta, in South Australia, recorded 50.7°C on 2 January 1960). Several other recordings above 49°C were reported in the northwest on the days preceding Mardie’s record, and at Nyang, the average maximum over the entire summer exceeded 43°C. As in 1923-24, very dry conditions accompanied the extreme heat.

h/t to Steven Goddard

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August 22, 2010 10:27 am

There are tens of thousands of cities on earth. Statistically speaking, we would expect that every year a significant number of them would have their “hottest summer ever.” It is nonsensical to blame Moscow on global warming, which is exactly why politicians are doing it.
160 straight days (almost half a year) of 100+ temperatures would be intolerable. At least in Phoenix they have mountains within an hour’s drive to escape the heat. Can’t do that in Marble Bar.

Peter Melia
August 22, 2010 11:34 am

Could Anthony’s system of rigorously examining the siting of recording instruments throw any new light on this high temperature record and period?
Would it be worth bothering about?

Spector
August 22, 2010 11:45 am

I still think the bottom line for temperature increase is in the smoothed HadCrut3 global average temperature anomaly data which seems to show about a 0.7 deg C increase since 1880 (and also since about 1925 due to the dip around 1910.) This is, I suspect, less than the cut-in to cut-out temperature range of a typical household thermostat .

Valdoie p Phillips
August 22, 2010 2:00 pm

The 1936 Heat wave in the United States has never been surpassed. Fifteen states absolute-maximun temperature records still stand today. Reading of 120 degrees or higher were recorded in Arizon, Arkansas , California, Kansas, Oklahoma , South Dakota, Texax and North Dakota where the temperature peaked at 121 degrees. Thirty eight cities hit record from 104 to 121 degrees.
On August 1, 1980 South Eastern Virginia hit 105 degrees and broke records in that six day period.

August 22, 2010 2:51 pm

Hi Anthony-
Re my comment above:
Yes Ive done every rural HQ site in Australia and nearly finished urban sites.
Ken

August 22, 2010 7:39 pm

People will always find some evidence to support their religion.
Even if the earth sinks into an ice age, the true believers will still find a hot day here and there to offer up to their gods.

Keith Battye
August 23, 2010 1:58 am

It seems highly likely that such hot spells in the region around Moscow happen quite frequently but who knows how hot it gets where the thermometers aren’t?

Toby Flenderson
August 23, 2010 6:11 am

I love your site and profusely thank you for your commitment to exposing AGW as the fraud it is…and may I ask you a favor?
Please include Fahrenheit readings.
Thanks

Spector
August 23, 2010 1:57 pm

In the case of the AGW alarm, I am not sure that fraud is quite the right word. There are always some people so dedicated to a cause or belief that they may think that it is OK to “tell a lie to tell the Truth.” This is usually equivalent an attempt to build a castle on a foundation of winter ice. Perhaps this alarm is better described as a modern technical superstition.