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Texas heatwave records record spring temperatures

Texas heatwave records record spring temperatures

Forecasters warned residents to limit strenuous outdoor activity and stay hydrated as large swaths in central and south Texas were sweltered by a spring heat wave for the second consecutive day on Thursday.

The National Weather Service issued heat advisories for 15 Texas counties spanning from the Rio Grande, Texas Hill Country and Gulf of Mexico. Temperatures were rising 15 to 20 degrees Fahrenheit above normal (8 to 11 degrees Celsius), with readings in the upper 90s and triple digits Fahrenheit.

Heat-index values were expected in central Texas, which includes San Antonio and Austin.

The heat index in Laredo, on the Rio Grande border, was predicted to be 110 F. Alice's oil fields in the inland area of Corpus Christi would reach 112 F.

Houston would feel hotter than usual, with a heat index of 101 F.

Forecasters expect that the previous daily record of 96 degrees F, set in 2003 on Thursday, will also be broken.

The Weather Service warned that high temperatures and humidity would continue through the weekend, and early next week. On Friday, conditions similar to those of a sauna are expected.

Scientists generally agree that climate change is causing episodes of unseasonably warm temperatures to become more frequent, longer and more pronounced.

Residents were advised to drink lots of water, wear light clothing, and avoid excessive exercise outdoors in order to prevent heat stroke or heat exhaustion. Forecasters said that the hot Texas weather was part a larger dome of heat above average building across large areas of the U.S., from the central and south Plains eastward to the Atlantic Coast into Florida. Reporting by Steve Gorman, Los Angeles; Editing Sandra Maler

(source: Reuters)