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Weatherbox: Part II
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Chatterbox slightly mangled in last week's "
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Weatherbox" item the meaning of the "hottest-ever" weather data available
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from NOAA. Chatterbox, wanting to get people to quit whining about the
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heat wave, used the data to point out that it's been a lot hotter, which it
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has. The data itself (including the hottest-ever temperature recorded
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officially--136 degrees Farenheit in El Azizia, Libya on Sept. 13, 1922--and
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the hottest-ever temperature recorded officially in the U.S.--134 degrees in
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Death Valley, Calif., on July 10, 1913) were correct. But Chatterbox, his mind
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clearly addled by the heat (it's much cooler now) misinterpreted the
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rankings below "hottest-ever" of both worldwide temperatures and U.S.
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temperatures. Chatterbox thanks the many readers who wrote in to inform him of
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his error.
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The NOAA data show the hottest days ever recorded on various continents, in
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declining order. Therefore, it's rash to conclude (as Chatterbox did) that the
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second-hottest temperature in known human history was the 134 degrees
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recorded in Death Valley--cited by NOAA as the hottest-ever temperature in
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North America, and as a temperature hotter than any other recorded by NOAA for
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any continent that isn't Africa. More likely, the second-hottest day in
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known human history probably occurred somewhere in Africa, where somebody
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probably measured a temperature of 135 degrees Farenheit. But this would
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not be included on the NOAA chart because Africa's record is the
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136 degrees figure for El Azizia, Libya, in 1922. Chatterbox's rankings
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for the U.S. were similarly skewed, since NOAA's chart listed all-time highs for individual states; hence the
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second-hottest day in the United States was probably not June 29,
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1994, when it hit 128 degrees in Lake Havasu City, Ariz., and 125 degrees
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Fahrenheit in Laughlin, Nev. Rather, the second-hottest day probably
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occurred in the same location as the hottest day, i.e., Death Valley,
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Calif., which is really, really hot. Indeed, a guy named Dinesh Desai
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claims to have recorded a temperature of 129
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degrees while walking across Death Valley in July 1998. (Chatterbox's
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rankings for third hottest, fourth hottest, etc., are, of course, similarly
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botched.)
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A reader e-mailed Chatterbox some intriguing evidence that the temperature
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may have lately spiked past El Azizia, Libya's, 1922 world record of 136
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degrees Farenheit--though not, of course, anywhere near these shores. Sgt.
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Scott Comiskey of the U.S. Army, who since April has been stationed in Kuwait,
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claims that it hit 142 degrees one day out on the live fire range. "I
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fought in the Gulf War," writes Comiskey, "and I can tell you this is the worst
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heat I have ever felt." Members of his task force were given T-shirts that say
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"142" in order to commemorate the event. This is not an officially sanctioned
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figure, but Chatterbox trusts the U.S. Army to handle a thermometer.
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None of these qualifications negates Chatterbox's message that it can get a
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lot hotter than it was last week in much of the U.S. Certainly Chatterbox means
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no disrespect to the (mostly elderly) people who died in the recent U.S. heat
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wave. But Chatterbox finds himself wondering why this heat wave, which
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stretched across the Midwest, the South, and the East, killed so many people in
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Chicago , a city in a relatively northern latitude that is reputed to be
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Windy and situated on a very big lake. (By now it's cooled down to 83 degrees
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at Chicago's Midway Airport, according to the Chicago Tribune's weather Web page.
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Click here for links to the Tribune's coverage of the heat
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wave.) According to the Tribune , Chicago had about 2.7 heat deaths per
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100,000 people, "a higher rate of these fatalities than Southern cities such as
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Atlanta and Miami," which tend to be hotter.
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One reason, apparently, is that Chicago doesn't have enough air conditioners
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for low-income people. Quoth the Tribune :
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Air conditioning is not standard equipment in low-income housing here,
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said Steve Forman, a professor of earth and environmental sciences at the
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University of Illinois at Chicago ... Only four of the 58 Chicago Housing
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Authority buildings for senior citizens have air conditioning in every room,
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according to CHA spokeswoman Karen Bates. CHA director Phil Jackson and Mayor
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Richard M. Daley have made it a goal to increase the number of units that
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provide residents with air conditioning, said Daley's press secretary,
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Jacquelyn Heard.
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Interestingly, the city's deaths and power outages came "despite a citywide
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emergency plan" that was implemented after an even worse heat wave in 1995, and
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despite the fact that forecasts "accurately predicted record-scraping
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temperatures" (this again, according to the Tribune ). However, Cook County's heat-wave death
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toll--70 people since July 19 (out of about 185 nationwide)--isn't as bad as in
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1995. The Tribune attributes this to the emergency plan, which
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had police ferrying about 1,200 people without air conditioning or fans to
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"cooling centers."
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Still, Chatterbox doesn't remember hearing before a few years ago about
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Chicago's unusual number of heat-related deaths. Chatterbox phoned Eric
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Klinenberg, a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at Berkeley, who's writing a book
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about the 1995 Chicago heat wave, to dig deeper. Klinenberg says the phenomenon
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is partly related to the recent decline of Chicago's industrial base. As
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sociologist William Julius Wilson points out in When Work Disappears , this decline has led to a lot of
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black migration out of Chicago. But when that happens, Klinenberg says, a lot
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of old folks stay put, and are therefore cut off from family support networks.
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Much the same is happening with white workers, Klinenberg says. As it happens,
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the heat-related deaths are concentrated among the white and black
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populations--and largely bypassing the city's sizable Latino population. That's
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mainly because "Latinos in Chicago are in a different migration cycle. Their
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numbers in the city have been increasing. ... They're newer arrivals and
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they're continuing to come in." In other words, the young Latino folks are
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situated near the old Latino folks, and can help them escape the heat. (To read
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Klinenberg's article, "Autopsie d'un été meurtrier à Chicago," in Le Monde
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Diplomatique, click here. Warning: As the title suggests, it's in French.)
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