That would have been during the formation of the Earth, specifically when it was hit by the proto-planet Thea, which led to the formation of the Moon, with temperatures estimated to have been somewhere around 2000°c.
Earth.
The hottest place on Earth with the highest average yearly temperature is typically in the Lut Desert in Iran. In this desert, temperatures can reach up to 159.3°F (70.7°C) during the summer months.
The hottest (surface temperature) is Venus then, getting colder: Mercury, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus. (In fact Neptune and Uranus are very similar in temperature.)
58oC
The Hottest Place on Earth ever recorded was El Azizia in Libya where the temperature reached a scorching 136 degrees Fahrenheit (57.8 Celsius) on Sept. 13, 1922. Making it the hottest place in the world.
There is a reason its called Death Valley. The hottest day ever there is also the hottest temperature ever recorded on Earth-- 134 degrees in 1913.
Venus is the hottest sister of earth, you get it? The temperature there is really hot, if you go there she will burn you.
No, Yuma, Arizona is not the hottest place on earth. The hottest recorded temperature on earth was in Death Valley, California, reaching 134 degrees Fahrenheit in 1913. Yuma does experience very high temperatures, but other locations have recorded higher temperatures.
The temperature at Earth's core is estimated to be around 5700 degrees Celsius (10,300 degrees Fahrenheit). The hottest temperature within the Earth is believed to be even higher, reaching potentially up to 7000 degrees Celsius (12,600 degrees Fahrenheit) in some localized areas or during volcanic activity.
The hottest volcano on Earth is Kilauea in Hawaii, with lava temperatures reaching around 2,200 degrees Fahrenheit (1,200 degrees Celsius).
This is the hottest tempteture recorded on earth since records began - 136F or 57.8C in libya. But in the olden days before people the world was much hotter, especially if we go back to when the earth was formed.
hottest temperature was 50.6 °C