Photos show what July’s heat and drought looked like this summer
Zachary Pruett, 10, catches wind with this umbrella as he struggles to put it away after he and his mother, Amanda Pruett of Santa Clarita, finish their morning at Castaic Lake Lagoon. The pair came to cool off “before the sun becomes dangerous,” she said.
The West boiled with record-breaking heat, and persistent drought that has left the Colorado River, Lake Mead and Lake Powell two-thirds empty, a ‘bathtub’ ring lining the shores of the largest water sources serving California.
As more frequent heat waves broke records this summer, our photojournalists documented what it looked like and how we coped.
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“According to Merriam-Webster, a drought is a temporary condition,” Kuhn said. What is happening, he suggested, is something more permanent and troubling. “This is aridification.”
— Eric Kuhn, former general manager of the Colorado River Conservation District
The most recent rain year, which ended in June, was the seventh-driest in Los Angeles’ 144 years of records and the third-driest on record in the Northern Sierra region.
Death Valley was expected to reach record temperatures of 130 degrees, which equals the hottest temperature recorded on Earth in nearly a century. But that record came two days early on the afternoon of July 9th.
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