The Impossible Heatwave Of 1923-1924

Hansen tells us that heatwaves are much worse now because of evil humans, so we know that the 1923-1924 record heatwave in Australia was impossible.

Marble Bar heatwave, 1923-24

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.

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.

BOM – Australian Climate Extremes

About Tony Heller

Just having fun
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4 Responses to The Impossible Heatwave Of 1923-1924

  1. ozspeaksup says:

    steven, early 2009 BoM had historical temp charts on site,
    Marble Bar Longreach and white cliffs from memory they were JPeg type chart pics.
    I saved the page, two weeks later it was vanished,
    supposedly tidying up and was stored in some obscure data format my pc wouldnt recognise.
    would be great to be able to find them again.
    blows present claims away.

  2. Blade says:

    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.

    Okay, that is hot.

  3. Rosco says:

    This is complete BS – everybody knows that without the super abilities of excess CO2 and the positive feedback from shedloads of water vapour it is impossible for temperatures to rise above minus 18 – climatologists tol’ me so.

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