Global average temperatures continue to rise, and scientists have just recorded the hottest day ever recorded on Earth.
Scientists have recorded the hottest day ever on Earth, and we hit it two days in a row., the air two meters above the Earth’s surface hit a global average of 62.92 degrees Fahrenheit , breaking the previous record.
The new record was set on July 4 and breaks the previous record of a global average temperature of 17.01 Celsius, which was just previously set on July 3, making two days in a row the hottest days that Earth has seen since records started. Before this new record, the highest that the global temperature average had hit was 16.92 Celsius .
Seeing two consecutive days breaking the record for the hottest days ever is surely a sign that scientists’ warnings about ongoing climate issues are not to be taken lightly. In fact, some studies even claim that could begin within the next 15 years, which would see our world changing drastically as sea level rises, important forests die, and other catastrophic events take place back to back.
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