dallol
Dallol, Ehiopia
52 C
Dallol, Ethiopia
Cause to the topographical positions surrounded with high mountains and sand dunes the temperature in the shadow can reach 95 Fahrenheit and 136 Fahrenheit on the ground.
The hottest temperature recorded in the world is 136 Fahrenheit in Libya The hottest recorded in US is 134 Fahrenheit in Death Valley, California. The hottest average weather inhabited place is Dallol, Ethiopia
According to the Scholastic Book of World Records 2007 the hottest inhabited place on earth is recorded as Dallol Ethiopia in Africa where temperatures can reach 145 degrees fahrenheit, or 62.8 celsius. No wonder they are shirtless so often! Whew. Brandon, 10
Most earthquakes occur on plate boundaries such as Japan and Chile and most volcanoes occur in diverging plate boundaries like Dallol and Iceland and the Pacific Ring of Fire like Ecuador and Indonesia
There is no actual latitude that is the hottest. Other factors such as altitude, proximity to the ocean, forests all play a part.
The hottest inhabited place on Earth is Dallol, Ethiopia. Between 1960 and 1966,its annual mean temperature was recorded as 34.4°C (93.9°F). The averagedaily maximum temperature there during the same period was 41.1°C (106.0°F).Interestingly, Dallol is not on the equator, or even very near it. Its latitude is 14.239° North,or about 1,580 km (980 miles) from the equator. Its extreme climate is related to itsposition in the Rift Valley, at about 130 meters (430 feet) below sea level.Similarly, the highest temperature ever recorded in North America was 134°F,in Death Valley, California, situated at 282 feet (86 meters) below sea level,and latitude 36.25° and 2,500 miles (4025 km) north of the equator.
The interior of a nuclear reactor on land or on a ship. Apart from a nuclear reactor, the dessert in Iran or Libya has had the hottest recorded surface temperatures (and apart from an active volcano spewing lava).
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.The second hottest place recorded on earth was in Death Valley, California, USA, where it got up to 134 Fahrenheit (57.8 Celsius) on July 10, 1913.Dallol, Ethiopia, is the warmest place on earth with an average yearly ambient surface air temperature of 307.55 kelvin (34.4°C = 93.92°F).