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May 15 (Reuters) – A record -setting springtime on Thursday under the heat wave caused large swaths of Central and South Texas to fall for a second day, as the forecasts warned the residents of the region to stay hydrated and limit loud external activities.
The National Meteorological Service posted heat advice in 15 Texas counties extending from Rio Grande and Texas Hill Country to Mexico, where the temperature was climbing normal and triple -digit reading fahinhit (upper 30s sans) in the normal -90s at the normal -90s.
The heat -scratch values were expected to be seen in a region of Central Texas, which incorporates the state capital of San Antonio and Austin – this is a solution that it makes a joint feeling jointly with air temperature and relative humidity – running as high as 109 ° F (42.7C).
The heat index was projected to reach 110F in the border city of Laredo on Rio Grande and reach the top of 112 F (44.4c) in the oil area hub of the inland Ellis from Corpus Christy.
Houston was expected to feel almost sharp by comparing the expected maximum heat index on 101F.
The 100-degree peak air temperature recorded on Wednesday at the Austin-Bangstrom Airport marked an all-time high for that date, and the forecasts stated that Thursday’s daily records, 96 degrees F, in 2003, were expected to be scattered as well.
Weather Seva said that more high heat and humidity was in the store through the weekend and early next week, on Friday, conditions like Sauna were expected.
While the occurrence of any extreme masam cannot be easily attributed to global warming, scientists usually agree that unseasonal high-temperature episodes are more frequent, long and clear as a result of climate change.
To prevent heat tiredness or stroke of heat, the residents were urged to avoid getting out, run your air conditioning indoors, drink lots of fluids and wear light clothes. According to the forecasts, the Torid Texas was the season of Torid Texas, a large dome of up-to-average heat formation on the large parts of the US from the central and southern plains to the Atlantic coast. (Reporting by Steve Gordeman at Los Angeles; editing by Sandra Maller)
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