Science

Death Valley records highest temperature in the world in more than 100 years

A thermometer at Death Valley's Furnace Creek in the Southern California desert has soared to 54.4 C (130 F), the highest global temperature in more than a century, the U.S. National Weather Service said.

Automated weather station at Furnace Creek hit 54.4 C on Sunday afternoon

Tourists walk in the Mesquite Dunes of Death Valley National Park, Calif., in 2013. A weather station at the park recorded a temperature of 54.4 C Sunday, the hottest temperature in the world in more than 100 years. (REUTERS)

A thermometer at Death Valley's Furnace Creek in the Southern California desert has soared to 54.4 C (130 F), the highest global temperature in more than a century, the U.S. National Weather Service (NWS) said.

"If verified, this will be the hottest temperature officially verified since July of 1913," NWS Las Vegas, which owns the automated observation system, said of the reading on Sunday afternoon, emphasizing that it was preliminary.

It will need to undergo a formal review before the record is confirmed because of its significance, NWS said on its Twitter feed, linking to a statement.

The National Weather Service's automated weather station close to the Furnace Creek visitors' centre near the border with Nevada hit the extreme high at 3:41 p.m. local time (6:41 p.m. ET).

Death Valley's all-time record high, according to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), is 56.7 C (134 F) taken on July 10, 1913 at Greenland Ranch.

That reading still stands as the hottest ever recorded on the planet's surface, according to the WMO.