Death Valley World Record 134 deg. F is Biased ~10 deg. Too High

From Dr. Roy Spencer’s Global Warming Blog

Roy W. Spencer, Ph. D.

Key Points:

  • Over the years, a few commentators have have argued that the world record highest temperature of 134 deg. F at Death Valley, CA recorded on July 10, 1913 is physically implausible.
  • Here I show quantitatively that the 134 deg F temperature is biased high, by about 10 deg. F.
  • Extensive historical research by William T . Reid has suggested the person making the temperature observations at Greenland Ranch likely replaced the official measurements from a thermometer in a Stevenson screen shelter with other measurements made next to the adobe living quarters.

Background

The “official” world record highest near-surface air temperature is 134 deg. F, recorded in Death Valley, California on July, 10, 1913 at Greenland Ranch, California an isolated location with no similarly sited stations with which to compare. Greenland Ranch was a manmade oasis created by the Borax people around the turn of the 20th Century, with water piped in from the nearby mountain. It has a rich history, but always against a backdrop of oppressive summer heat that few visitors (and even workers) could endure.

As part of my new analyses of GHCN daily high and low temperatures, John Christy suggested I take a look at the Death Valley temperature data, and the record 134 deg. temperature in particular. Several people over the years have expressed concerns that the 134 deg. reading is implausibly high, but this has been difficult to prove. Both the World Meteorological Organization and NOAA’s National Weather Service continue to recognize 134 deg. F as the world record. It is quite likely that Death Valley remains the hottest location in North America; it’s the world record value that is in question here.

The most extensive meteorological and historical arguments against the record I’m aware of come from a series of blog posts by storm chaser William T. Reid, re-posted at Weather Underground here, which I did not read until after I did the calculations which follow. I have since read some of what Bill has written, and I encourage anyone with an interest in history to read his extensive summaries (along with old photos) of Greenland Ranch, where the world record temperature was recorded. He has done considerable library research and he found a letter from the ranch foreman who expressed disappointment that the measurements from the instrumented shelter provided by the U.S. Weather Bureau in 1911 were so much lower than what he measured under his veranda. Bill suspects (and I agree) that the reported values for some period of time might well have not been from the instrumented shelter.

The method I will use to demonstrate the near-certainty of a high bias was also included in a limited fashion in Reid’s blog post (which contains a variety of meteorological arguments). I will apply the method to all years since 1911, and will show that the 134 deg. F record was approximately 10 deg. higher than what it should have been. The analyses I present are based upon the NOAA GHCN daily temperatures, with basic NOAA quality control procedures applied, thus they are from an “official” source. The GHCN dataset includes the 134 deg. F record high temperature from Death Valley.

How Can One Quality-Check the World Record Highest Temperature?

The main reason that the world record hottest temperature cannot be easily “fact-checked” is that there were no other weather stations in Death Valley at the time, and the low elevation (below sea level) of Greenland Ranch is routinely tens of degrees F hotter than at the mountain stations, which are tens of miles away and thousands of feet higher.

Yet, from a meteorological standpoint, Death Valley in the summer is the perfect place to quality check those hot temperatures from distant, mountain stations. Before I explain the reasons why, let’s first look at how Death Valley air temperatures compare to high-elevation stations during July of this year (2024, which had near-record high temperatures), as well as during July of 2013. Following is a plot (Fig. 1) of July-average high temperatures (Tmax) for all stations within 100 miles of the Furnace Creek station (previously “Greenland Ranch”, and today called Death Valley National Park [NP] station). Importantly, I’m plotting these average temperatures versus station elevation:

Fig. 1. July average maximum temperatures at stations within 100 miles of Furnace Creek, CA in 2024 (top) and 1913 (bottom), plotted against station elevation. The regression lines are fit to all stations except those near Greenland Ranch/Furnace Creek/Death Valley N.P.

Note the strong relationship between station elevation and temperature, something William Reid also noted. Significantly, the two lowest-elevation stations (in Death Valley) in 2024 have temperatures which are very close to the regression line that relates how the July-average high temperatures vary with station altitude (the two Death Valley stations, located below sea level, are not included in the regression).

The regression line can be computed in the other years, too, and used to statistically estimate what temperature the Furnace Creek station in Death Valley should have measured, based upon the surrounding, higher-altitude stations. This method allows us to estimate the Death Valley temperatures in each year, which is shown next in Fig. 2.

Fig. 2. Yearly estimates of July average temperature at Furnace Creek, CA based upon all available GHCN stations within 100 miles of Furnace Creek. Each yearly estimate is based upon upon the station data from that year. The indicated estimate on July 10, 1913 (the date of the world record 134 deg. F reported reading) is 10 degrees cooler than the world record, at 124 deg. F. This 1-day estimate is based upon the surrounding stations only on that date. Note the 2024 value is about 0.5 deg. F above the value in 1931.

Meteorological Justification for the Methodology

There are solid meteorological reasons why one can use fairly distant, high-elevation stations to check Death Valley temperatures in July. (Remember, my formal training is as a meteorologist… I only work in climate because it pays better. I actually took some of the temperature measurements contained in the GHCN dataset during summers in the late 1970s when I interned at the National Weather Service Office in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan).

In simple terms, daytime temperatures during the warm season in dry, semi-desert or desert climates vary with altitude in a predictable and repeatable manner, and with little change over substantial distances. Evidence of this is shown in Fig. 1. This is much less true during the cool season, at night, or during cloudy (or even rainy) weather. This makes Death Valley in July one of the best places on Earth for fact-checking of very warm temperature values. This applies very well to the southwestern U.S. in the summer (at least before monsoon rains arrive), where a semi-permanent high pressure ridge in May-July gets set up every year, with slowly subsiding (sinking) air producing mostly clear skies. This kind of weather feature has a large and uniform regional extent (unlike low pressure troughs, which can be sharp with strong horizontal temperature changes; that’s related to something called the “Rossby radius of deformation“.)

In simple terms, the warm, high pressure airmasses that settle in over the SW U.S. in July are spatially uniform, with strong daytime vertical mixing producing temperature lapse rates approaching the dry adiabatic value. This allowing comparisons between temperature at stations up to (for example) 100 miles away. The big differences in temperatures between neighboring stations, then, are primarily due to altitude. Daytime temperatures in the summer in dry climates decrease rapidly with height (see the plot above), providing the most perfect meteorological conditions for doing the kind of comparison I’m describing here.

Estimated July Biases in the Greenland Ranch/Furnace Creek/Death Valley N.P.

Finally, we can examine the difference between the reported July average temperatures in Death Valley from the GHCN data and the estimates from the surrounding stations (Fig. 3).

Fig. 3. Estimated biases in the official GHCN July-average temperatures in Death Valley, CA based upon comparison to Death Valley estimates made from all stations within 100 miles of Furnace Creek. The 1-2 deg. F average bias over most of the record might well not be an actual bias in the official measurements, but instead a bias in the method described.

Note the substantial warm biases in the temperatures reported at Greenland Ranch in the first 10-15 years after the USWB installed the instrumented shelter. Again, as Bill Reid surmises, the ranch foreman was likely reporting values from a different thermometer that had poor exposure, next to a building. Also shown in green are data from a nearby station (5 miles away, at essentially the same elevation) called Cow Creek. Note that in the most recent decade, the Death Valley temperature estimates from surrounding stations agree with those measured at the current Death Valley N.P. observation site.

The bottom line is that I believe there to be sufficient quantitative evidence to say that the 134 deg. F world record hottest temperature, still recognized by the WMO and NWS, is as much as 10 deg. F too warm, likely due to observer error. Again, for those interested in the history of Greenland Ranch (which includes the stories of those who died trying to escape the oppressive summer heat), read the fascinating history uncovered by Bill Reid, starting here.

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KevinM
November 8, 2024 11:15 am

If all the ways to achieve records are mined now/soon, then the next generation will have nowhere to look for new records. Let’s not help revise down past errors so new tricksters can re-set the same records with old tricks.

Rud Istvan
November 8, 2024 11:37 am

Fascinating. Bill Reid figured it out qualitatively a decade ago from historical research, and now you have proven it quantitatively using a bulletproof meteorological methodology. Why WUWT is such a preminent site.

bdgwx
Reply to  Rud Istvan
November 8, 2024 1:08 pm

William Reid did a similar analysis to Dr. Spencer’s. See Part 3 of his 8 part series on the topic. Dr. Spencer mentions William Reid’s work in this regard.

November 8, 2024 11:54 am

Relevant to the above article:

“It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so.” —attributed to Mark Twain.

Tom Halla
November 8, 2024 12:18 pm

At least this is a valid reason to revise a temperature record, unlike a “bad fit for the model” which seems common.

Reply to  Tom Halla
November 8, 2024 3:08 pm

No. Roy is arguing that the record doesn’t fit the lapse rate model.

November 8, 2024 12:23 pm

I am in no position to question your analysis.

However, Fredonia, Kansas hit 121F on 7/18/36. About a week later, Alton, Kansas hit 121F on 7/24/36.

The elevation at Fredonia is 896′. The elevation at Alton is 1650′.

If you plot the Alton record on your regressions versus elevations, it is almost as far above the line as the 134F record at Death Valley.

There are some rare weather conditions that are exceedingly hot! It is difficult to evaluate the “science” of very rare phenomenon.

Rud Istvan
Reply to  pillageidiot
November 8, 2024 1:28 pm

Roy’s method won’t work for Kansas. Death Valley has essentially no humidity in summer—nor do any of the surrounding mountain stations. Hence he can rely on the dry adiabatic lapse rate over a largish geography for his regressions. Kansas is normally humid in summer according to U. Kansas—thanks to influx of air from the Gulf. A quick search did not locate humidity records for the 1936 heat wave. I poked around for about half an hour. Lots of papers on the records you cite, but none of those I checked also provided associated humidity.

roywspencer
Reply to  Rud Istvan
November 8, 2024 1:36 pm

Those kinds of temperatures in Kansas would only occur in very dry, drought conditions. If real (or close to real), I suspect downslope subsidence warming from the mountains to the west… a very different synoptic situation.

bdgwx
Reply to  roywspencer
November 8, 2024 1:51 pm

Yeah, here in St. Louis we get a similar effect with the downslope adiabatic compression off the Ozark Plateau. One of the ways we forecast daily highs here is based on wind direction. SW winds here lead to higher temperatures than would occur otherwise. So yes, I agree that Kansas could be subject to adiabatic compression as well especially if the winds have a westerly component.

BTW…having a long time interest in the daily highs of Death Valley I found your article interesting and well written.

Reply to  roywspencer
November 8, 2024 2:34 pm

You are correct Dr. Spencer on the local conditions.

The record high temperatures in Kansas almost always occur during very dry, drought conditions.

However, I believe those historical temperature records were achieved so far away from any orographic areas that there was nearly zero downslope subsidence warming.

Of course, I could easily be wrong. Driving west across Kansas and into eastern Colorado, the rain lee of the Rocky Mountains is quite obvious. Does the downslope warming (for daily temperature records) persist as far as the rain lee? (I understand they are related phenomenon.)

Richard Greene
November 8, 2024 12:57 pm

The Global Historical Climatology Network (GHCN) has over 100,000 land-based weather stations in 180 countries and territories. The GHCN is a database of daily climate summaries that includes data on variables such as temperature, precipitation, snowfall, and snow depth. 

A whole article speculating about ONE TMAX measurement, on ONE day in 1913, is the worst climate data mining I have ever seen in 28 years of climate reading.

Spencer is not going to get funding for UAH in the future with one day weather report articles like this one.

2024 is the warmest year in about 5000 years. Speculation about one afternoon in Death Valley on 1913 changes nothing.

This unpersuasive adjusting of 1913 data for one afternoon’s TMAX 111 years later is data mining claptrap.

Reply to  Richard Greene
November 8, 2024 1:12 pm

Congratulations. You missed the point of the article entirely.

Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
November 8, 2024 1:52 pm

He even didn’t know the point resp. that there is any.

roywspencer
Reply to  Retired_Engineer_Jim
November 8, 2024 1:58 pm

I had this mistaken impression the all-time world highest temperature ever recorded was significant to someone. My bad.

Reply to  Richard Greene
November 8, 2024 2:53 pm

Wow.

If my knee jerked that hard, I would have to go in for emergency surgery!

Reply to  Richard Greene
November 8, 2024 5:43 pm

2024 is the warmest year in about 5000 years”

More total BS and ignorance.

Nearly all the Holocene has been warmer, going back from the MWP to the beginning of the Holocene.

William Reid
Reply to  Richard Greene
November 10, 2024 9:45 pm

There are numerous instances from April to June of 1913 where the maximums at Greenland Ranch appear to be some 5-10 degrees F too high, given the maximums at the closest surrounding stations. In the second week of July, 1913, when all high temperatures ranged from 127 to 134F, surrounding stations supported Death Valley maximums up to only about 126F. This is not a case of one particular report which looks too hot. How and why did Greenland Ranch reach 128 twice, 129 twice, and 130, 131 and 134 from July 7 to 14, 1913…and NEVER manage to have a maximum temperature greater than 127F in all other years from 1911 to 1960? (The Death Valley station has only reached 130F from 1961 to 2024.) Several high-end summer heat events have set records region-wide since 2013, yet Death Valley consistently falls well short of its 134F record set in 1913. Is it not logical for a climatologist to take a close look at the early data and to “speculate” on its veracity? Here is a link to a summary of sorts (by me) which shows just how “out to lunch” the 134F record is.

https://stormbruiser.com/chase/2020/11/11/death-valleys-improbable-record-temperature-of-134f/

bdgwx
November 8, 2024 1:29 pm

As I’ve mentioned before the highest undisputed temperature on Earth is likely the 130 F readings on August 16th, 2020 and July 9th, 2021 at the Furnace Creek station. And based on [McKay 2024] it has been shown that Badwater Basin, which is a short drive to the salt flat their close to Furnace Creek, typically achieves a similar daily high temperature as Furnace Creek so there is only a small chance that it got warmer than 130 F on those two days.

Anyway, it is my understanding that William Reid and Christopher Burt having been working on a peer reviewed publication of their findings. Note that Christopher Burt has experience with formal reviews like these. See [Fadli et al. 2013] for details of the 1922 Libya observation.

bdgwx
Reply to  bdgwx
November 8, 2024 1:45 pm

On a personal note I visited Death Valley this summer in which the highest monthly average temperature on Earth was recorded this year at 108.5 F. The day we went the temperature got up to 125 F. I have never felt heat like that before. It was horrific. And I say that being used to the 120 F heat indices living here in the midwest corn belt with evapotranspiration in overdrive during July.. The fact that it was dry heat didn’t seem to be taking the edge off at all. It was worst heat I’ve ever experienced. Anyway, the heat severely limited what we could see and do in the park that day. In fact, someone got severely burned from the sand dunes while we were there. I hope someday we can go back when it isn’t dangerous because the park is beautiful with some really neat sites.

Reply to  bdgwx
November 8, 2024 3:30 pm

One July I drove from San Jose (CA) to Las Vegas for a GSA conference. My Scout didn’t have air conditioning. While it was only about 104, as I recollect, I decided to stop in at the Furnace Creek HQ to cool down in the air conditioned building and get some cool water before completing the rest of the drive to LV. I had to laugh because there was a couple in the building, speaking what sounded like German, walking around in what appeared to be their underwear. I guess they had never before experienced what is a common summertime temperature in Northern California. For me, it was hot, but not something I hadn’t experienced frequently, often doing field work in even hotter temperatures.

sherro01
Reply to  bdgwx
November 9, 2024 3:16 am

We had an exploration camp near Lake Disappointment in the desert of West Australia where temperatures in summer could nudge 50C (122F) or even pass it if you used custom thermometers. The guys requested a grant for a swimming pool so an above ground plastic liner type appeared. They justified it as a water reserve for fire fighting.
The pump was electric, so the pool went next to the Indian diesel generator, but it sprung a leak and sparked and caught fire. The fire quickly destroyed the plastic liner and water flowed away in no time.
The best laid plans ..,.
Yes, it was quite taxing to do work for a day in the summer.
Geoff S

William Reid
Reply to  bdgwx
November 10, 2024 9:54 pm

You might enjoy my drive with temperature measurements through DV on July 9, 2024. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vgPNvhdP7T4

roywspencer
Reply to  bdgwx
November 8, 2024 2:01 pm

…and if you bother to look into it, evidence from a properly ventilated thermometer at that site suggests those temperatures are 2-3 deg. F too high. (Evidence presented at an AMS conference). But, it’s The Hottest Place On Earth, right? Gotta keep those tourists coming! https://stormbruiser.com/chase/2022/09/06/detailed-afternoon-temperature-comparisons-at-furnace-creek-in-death-valley-in-july-2021/

bdgwx
Reply to  roywspencer
November 8, 2024 2:40 pm

Maybe. Reid actually states 1-3 F while McKay states about a +1 F bias at 130 F for a passively aspiration station based on a his study from 1998-2019 using an aspirated YSI 41342 RTD verified to ±0.1 C for comparison. During the period of study this instrument recorded 129 F during 4 different heat waves in which in the Furnace Creek station also recorded 129 F. This seems to suggest that the Furnace creek station may have little if any bias at recording the daily high. Though there is definitely differences between two as well. The NWS now runs the Badwater Basin station. But it too shows similar temperatures to Furnace Creek. There are many times where Furnace Creek is even a couple of degrees cooler than Badwater Basin during the hottest part of the day.

bdgwx
Reply to  bdgwx
November 8, 2024 4:45 pm

bdgwx: As I’ve mentioned before the highest undisputed temperature on Earth.

Nope. That’s not right. Both of these temperatures are, of course, disputed.

William Reid
Reply to  bdgwx
November 10, 2024 9:51 pm

I have been a bit slow on getting my act together on the peer-reviewed paper. Hopefully soon…I have too much other stuff to do! The Badwater station is much better exposed than the official one at Furnace Creek. So even though the Badwater area is typically a degree or two or three F hotter than FC on most summer afternoons, the reported temperatures are now pretty close day-to-day because of the exposure differences. The grassy and irrigated areas of Furnace Creek cause it to be slightly cooler than Badwater, generally speaking.

November 8, 2024 3:05 pm

Would one expect to find the most extreme global temperature fitting nicely along the lapse rate line, or would one expect it to be an outlier for unknown reasons? What causes the variance found in the lapse rate measurements? Is it possible that there was some local factor that isn’t found at the higher elevations such as lack of wind in the basin? What role does topography play in elevating air temperatures?

One of the hottest days I ever experienced was the 1968 July 4th weekend on in the north fork of the American River, along the NS isotherm that typically runs approximately through Sonora (CA). An AM radio weather broadcast in the afternoon reported it being 120 degrees (F) in Sonora. There would be intermittent gusts of wind blowing upstream that were perceptibly hotter than the background conditions. Notably, my wife, younger brother, and I would all start coughing with the onset of the up-canyon gusts. I presume that the hot gusts were flash evaporating the river water and elevating the relative humidity akin to a steam sauna.

November 8, 2024 4:23 pm

Harold The Old Organic Chemist Says:
ATTN: Roy and Everyone
RE: Hypothesis: CO2 Does Not Cause Warming of Air.

Shown in the graphic (See below) are plots of temperatures in Death Valley from 1922 to 2001. In 1922 the concentration of CO2 in world air was 303 ppmv (0.595 g of CO2/cu. m. of air), and by 2001, it had increased to 371 ppmv (0.729 g of CO2/cu. m. of air), but there was no corresponding increase in the temperature of the desert air. On the basis of this empirical field data, it is concluded that CO2 does not cause warming of the air at this arid desert site, and by extension global warming. Therefore, the hypothesis is confirmed. The physical reason CO2 does does not warming of air is quite simple: There is too little CO2 in the air.

I now ask: Is the above analysis correct? If it is, can it be used to convince the people and politicians that CO2 is not a dangerous global-warming greenhouse gas as claimed by IPCC and vast coterie of unscrupulous collaborating scientists, and that there is no need to reduce the emission of it or to the implement onerous carbon taxes. We should inform the people that 71% of the earth’s is covered with H2O, the main greenhouse gas.

NB: The graphic was obtained from the late John Daly’s website:
“Still Waiting for Greenhouse” available at: http://www.John-Daly.com. From the homepage scroll down to the end and click on the tab “Station Temperature Data” to access temperature graphics from weather stations located around the world. These show no global warming to 2002.

death-vy
Mr.
November 8, 2024 4:24 pm

I think that “hot” is a very subjective conclusion / description of ambient conditions.

One person’s “hot” is another person’s “nice”.

Similarly, when my missus complains about the “freezing” conditions in our house and starts twisting the control knobs on the thermostats up to 11, I’m heading off to change into shorts and singlet.

Randle Dewees
November 8, 2024 4:45 pm

I’ve lived in the Indian Wells Valley (second valley from Death) since 1989. I have been in DV several times during July and August, with the official high temp around 125F. That’s hot, like really hot. I’ve found at about 115F you start getting that blast furnace effect. 125 is full on blast. The record for IWV is 119F – happened in 1988, 1993, 2021, all in July. IWV is 2,200′ elevation. How does that calculate out for 2,500′ lower – about 130?

As stinking hot as 119 feels, especially as the hot spell has no doubt been going on for a while, I’ve been calibrated to what is a hot place to live in (not for me!) by driving through Needles and Blythe on regular trips to Albuquerque and Tucson – watching my car temp readout go to 122-124.

Back in the days when we were allowed to be idiots the Bad Water Ultra Race was held on what was statistically the hottest weekend of the year. The runners took off from the starting line at the time that would give them the highest temps as they ran north up the axis of the valley, then made the big climb up past Stovepipe Wells on highway 190.

It was a really extreme event, ending at the top of Mt Whitney 140 miles later, but as far as I know no runners died or even really had serious problems, they were either well prepared* or they quit before they got in trouble. It got slimed down a bit over the years but it’s still a ridiculous toughie. Now the NPS requires a night start, and the race ends at Whitney Portal. Oddly, this event attracts monsoon weather and there have been some wild times.

*If in the summer you are driving up the Whitney Portal Road in the hot middle of the day, and there is some person trudging up the shoulder wearing a rubber suit and dragging a car tire behind them, that’s a common training method for this race.

bdgwx
Reply to  Randle Dewees
November 8, 2024 5:39 pm

Back in the days when we were allowed to be idiots the Bad Water Ultra Race was held on what was statistically the hottest weekend of the year.

They were doing that race when we were there this summer. I’m convinced these have to be the toughest humans on the planet. And yes, it was being ran with 120+ F temperatures.

Randle Dewees
Reply to  bdgwx
November 8, 2024 6:11 pm

It’s a very specialized kind of toughness. The runner trains for the heat. Basically, they are all decent 100 milers, but it is that special heat training that will get them through it. There’s a bunch of tech (foot taping and blister control) and skin toughening for the insanely hot pavement temperatures. Ice, Ice, Ice! My wife was a serious 100 miler, but she never tried this one. She was more of a high mountain trail runner, she liked cold. We know several people who have completed the run. She crewed one of her friends on a successful race, it was a fun, weird, and exhausting experience.

And it’s a long race, >130 miles now. Has a ton of climbing. However, there are harder races, much much harder. Look up the “Barkley Marathon”. That one is just insane.

Reply to  Randle Dewees
November 10, 2024 3:04 pm

I’ve found at about 115F you start getting that blast furnace effect. 125 is full on blast.

I lived in California for several decades. I didn’t own a car with A/C until I moved to Ohio 20 years ago. It was my experience that driving in California was more comfortable with the windows down up until about 110, which is where I felt the blast furnace effect.

Rational Keith
November 8, 2024 5:53 pm

Guessing through factors affecting temperature reading under porch of a dwelling:

  • sheltered from sun
  • some airflow]
  • possible hearing from sun on upper surface
  • unknown heating from rest of dwelling

‘Porch’ in my country experience could e a sheltered entry area but in hot climate probably not enclosed.

A rudimentary building may have a simple platform.
A fancy building will have a rood but open sides, typically called a ‘veranda’

As for covering on sides of the porch below walking surface, there may be some to keep larger creatures out but least a door to give access to the thermometer (unless it is on a string through hole in floor).

Rational Keith
Reply to  Rational Keith
November 8, 2024 6:16 pm

William T. Reid’s writings describe a veranda on the north side of the building – which is logical, and suggests to me the caretaker’s thermometer was simply hung on a wall of post.

Reid nots there would be some sun hearing of the veranda late in the day.

Reid notes accuracy of the thermometer is not known, I presume it was simply one he had.
(As well, my impression from reading articles is that the caretaker was not involved in the formal measuring station that was set up, the notion that he substituted his thermometer readings for the formal ones does not make sense.

But Reid talks of someone else saying temperatures with a semi-official thermometer reached 130F more than once.

There’s much information in Reid’s writings.

William Reid
Reply to  Rational Keith
November 10, 2024 10:07 pm

Thanks — Jimmy Dayton was caretaker at Greenland Ranch during the 1890s, and a couple of sources mention readings of 136F and 137F at the ranch around the 1890s. Dayton is probably the one who was reading the thermometer for these measurements. We do not know anything about this thermometer, but we do know that it was not in the direct sun as it was under the veranda of the ranch house and on the north side.

Presumably, this same (household) thermometer was still in place when the official USWB instrumentation was set up some 150-200 feet south of the ranch house in June, 1911. Denton became caretaker/foreman/observer in the fall of 1912. He included a note with the climate form for July 1913 saying that other thermometers at the ranch showed much higher values than the maximums that he recorded and entered onto the official monthly climate form for July 1913.

Does it make sense that Denton would substitute higher readings for those attained in the official thermometer shelter? Well, NO! But the excessive maximums in the first half of July 1913 at Greenland Ranch are not supported by the other stations, and Denton admits that he was checking against other thermometers…

Randle Dewees
November 9, 2024 6:38 am

Not very far from Death Valley is the Indian Wells Valley. The main town is Ridgecrest, and the Naval Air Warfare Center (NAWC) China Lake occupies most of the valley. It’s very dry as it’s in the rain shadow of the Sierra Nevada. The elevation of Ridgecrest and NAWC Main Site is about 2,250′.

I haven’t looked at detailed climate records for the IWV but a simple search show in the last few decades the max high has reached 119F three times – 1988, 1993, and 2021. All in July. My memory is all of these episodes were very dry.

A simple dry air lapse rate calc from 2250′ to -200′ equals +13.4F.

119F + 13.4F = 132.4F

119F doesn’t seem all that uncommon out here, why would 132F not be common in Death Valley?

William Reid
Reply to  Randle Dewees
November 10, 2024 10:17 pm

Good question. Authentic maximums near 120F at elevations near 2000 feet are very rare. I almost said “extremely” rare, but there have been a few summer heat waves since 2020 with a 120F at that elevation. Maximums in the Death Valley region and Mojave Desert don’t decrease quite as “fast” with elevation as compared to the dry adiabatic lapse rate. It is about 4.5 degrees F per 1000 feet for July maximums (ave daily and ave highest for the month) versus 5.4 deg F per 1000 feet for the dry adiabatic lapse rate. Plug in this slightly less steep lapse rate into your example and you come closer to 129 to 130F for DV.

Why is the observed lapse rate of the maximums versus elevation about 83 percent of the dry adiabatic lapse rate? I don’t know. It may be that higher elevation areas are able to mix to somewhat higher altitudes, where the potential temperature is slightly higher comparably.

Dave Andrews
November 9, 2024 7:31 am

Just like to say that reading this thread here in NE Wales, where we have had only about 20 minutes of sunshine over the last two and a half weeks, has been very interesting and warmed me up considerably. Thanks!

November 9, 2024 10:06 am

Whether this is “officially” accepted or not, what is the current #2 highest temp?

William Reid
Reply to  Gunga Din
November 10, 2024 10:19 pm

131F on July 13, 1913 at Greenland Ranch!

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