A record-breaking heatwave afflicting the western half of the United States moved eastward Saturday toward the center of the country, bringing unseasonably warm temperatures to places that were at freezing or below just a week prior.
Dozens of cities from California to Colorado recorded their highest temperatures ever for the month of March, according to the National Weather Service Weather Prediction Center.
On Saturday, areas that saw new records for the highest temperatures in March included 33.3°C recorded in Kansas City, Missouri, and North Platte, Nebraska.
Topeka, the state capital of Kansas, broke its March record Saturday with a high of 35°C, weather officials said.
In Wyoming, the least populous US state, all-time March temperatures were set in capital Cheyenne at 28.3°C.
On top of the monthly all-time highs, the heatwave reached several other temperature milestones.
For instance, in Chanute, Kansas, temperatures went from a record low of -10.5°C on March 16 to a record high of 32.8°C just four days later.
And in Phoenix, Arizona, one of the hottest cities in the United States, the daily low was a balmy 21.1°C on Saturday, the earliest in the year such a level had been reached, the weather agency said.
Cities recording all-time daily highs Saturday included Denver, Grand Island, Nebraska and Midland, Texas.
On Friday the heatwave had brought temperatures up to 44.4°C in several areas along the southern California-Arizona border, a national US record for March.
The National Weather Service issued an extreme heat warning for the same desert areas on Saturday, as well as a red flag warning -- indicating high wildfire risk -- for much of the central Plains states of Nebraska, Kansas and Oklahoma.
Scientists say there is overwhelming evidence that current heatwaves are a clear marker of global warming, a process driven chiefly by the burning of fossil fuels. (AFP)
Edited by Priscilla Ng
