Nearly 50C: More temperature records smashed as 'heat dome' persists

Australia claimed all of the top 15 hottest spots in the world over the 24 hours to 8am on Thursday.

A red-tinged sunset behind trees

Several towns hit temperatures close to 50C, with the South Australian outback town of Marree winning the title of hottest place on the planet for a day. Source: AAP

More all-time temperature records have been smashed across Australia's interior as a climate change-fuelled heatwave grips the continent.

Some of the hottest temperatures included the South Australian outback town of Marree, where the mercury nudged 49.8C.

Also in South Australia, Roxby Downs recorded 49.6C, while Woomera hit 48.5C and Leigh Creek climbed to 48.2C — all temperatures never before seen.

Maree was the hottest spot on the planet for a day, according to online world temperatures site El Dorado Weather.

Australia also claimed all of the top 15 hottest spots in the world over the 24 hours to 8am on Thursday.

Senior meteorologist Dean Narramore said the blistering heat had broken dozens of temperature records across South Australia, NSW and Victoria over the course of a week.

He said what made this event more unusual was its longevity, which meant there was more time for heat to build up.

"This situation had a bit of a blocking pattern," the Bureau of Meteorology forecaster told the Australian Associated Press.

"So the heat has just sat over us and just kind of wobbled around the south-eastern part of the country [with] no strong cold front to come in and clear it out."

Narramore said the records that had been broken were multi-generational, with some having stood for a century.

"They're not just 10 or 20 years old, they're 30, 50, 80 and in some cases 100 years old," he said.

"A lot of the records have been similar to a heatwave back in 1939, so that's going back a long way."

Heatwave warnings still in place

Heatwave warnings remain in place for NSW, Victoria, Queensland, WA, SA, the ACT and NT for Friday.

Maree (forecast high 49C), Port Augusta (49C), Roxby Downs (48C), Moomba (47C) and other east and north-east parts of SA are in for more extreme heat.

The mercury was also expected to reach 47C in Birdsville, Queensland, 46C in Mildura, Victoria, 45C in Broken Hill, NSW, and 43C in Wagga Wagga, also in NSW.

Of the capitals, Adelaide (expected top 41C) and Canberra (40C) will face the brunt of the heat.

Narramore said climate change was a contributing factor in the conditions.

"Obviously there is background warming so there's more energy and more heat in the atmosphere," he said.

"So when the systems align for these extreme scenarios, they are just a little bit warmer and last that little bit longer."

Conditions set to ease over the weekend

The severe to extreme conditions are forecast to ease for almost all parts of the country by Sunday, bringing an end to the so-called "heat dome".

Narramore said average temperatures in Australia were between 1 and 1.5C higher than they were a century ago.

The federal government's National Climate Risk Assessment, released last September, projected that the number of severe heatwave days per year would double at 2C of warming and quadruple at 3C.

Heat-related deaths are projected to increase fivefold at 3C of warming.


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Source: AAP




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