Photo: Dave Killen/The Oregonian via AP

Over the weekend, both Portland and Seattle, Washington, set records for most consecutive days of high temperatures, according to theAssociated Press. Temperatures in Portland rose above 95 degrees Fahrenheit for a seventh consecutive day on Sunday, while Seattle recorded temperatures above 90 degrees for a sixth consecutive day.
In the release, officials said that “this designation as a heat-related death is preliminary and further investigation may reveal a cause of death that’s unrelated to hyperthermia.” That final determination may not come for months.
The National Weather Service released an excessive heat warning for the Portland and Seattle regions, which lasted through Sunday evening. On Saturday evening, the NWS shared a map onTwitterthat forecasted temperatures in the high 90s and 100s.
Additionally, King County in Washington — where Seattle is located — reported three heat-related deaths between Friday and Sunday, according to apress releaseissued on Monday. In total, some 13 million people in the Northwest were under “heat alerts” on Sunday, according to CNN.
In 2021,more than 100 people in Oregon died as a result of a heat wavethat blanketed the region from late June to early July. At the time, officials described the heat wave as a “mass casualty event” due to a “heat dome” phenomenon.
On Monday, CNN meteorologist Haley Brink used similar phrasing in forecasting weather across the country for the week, referring to the heat wave as a “dome of heat.”
As of Tuesday, expected high temperatures in the Northwest appeared to have largely lowered into the high 80s and 90s, according to theNational Weather Service.
Craig Mitchelldyer/AP Photo

On July 24, more than 90 million Americans were under dangerous weather warnings as temperatures were expected to reach as high as 109 degrees in some parts of the country.
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The National Weather Service (NWS) warned that the heat would “feel extremely oppressive” in the northeast, leading formervice president Al Gore to point out that"the scientists have predicted these extraordinary and catastrophic events for going on decades now," in an appearance on ABC News’This Week with George Stephanopoulos.

“And the fact that they were dead right, maybe a little conservative even in their projections, should cause us to pay more careful attention to what they’re warning us about now,” Gore, 74, told Jonathan Karl.
“They’re saying that if we don’t stop using our atmosphere as an open sewer, and if we don’t stop these heat trapping emissions, things are gonna get a lot worse,” Gore said. “More people will be killed and the survival of our civilization is at stake.”
source: people.com