Clouds and moisture act as a blanket holding in the heat of the day. These are lacking in a desert. Once the sun goes down in the desert, the heat begins to radiate back into space and the temperature can drop quite drastically.
The Mojave Desert is in the rainshadow of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. It is also at a latitude that is generally under high atmospheric pressure that suppresses thunderstorm development.
The Mojave Desert has been known to exceed 130 degrees F. in the summer, especially in Death Valley.
The highest temperature in Death Valley was at Furnace Creek in 1913 when it reached 134 degrees F.
The hottest air temperature ever reliably recorded in a desert was 134 degrees F in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert in California on July 10, 1913. An even warmer temperature of 136 degrees was recorded a few years later in Libya but that has been discounted as inaccurate as it was not properly measured by untrained Italian soldiers. A recent ground temperature was measured by a satellite in Iran that was even hotter but the ground temperature does not reflect the temperature of the air above it. Anyone who has walked barefoot over an asphalt parking lot in summer can attest to that.
Temperatures have been as low as 8 degrees F in January and as high as 134 in summer (Death Valley record high).
The two major deserts that enter California are the Sonoran Desert and the Mojave Desert.
Usually the months of June and July are the hottest months in the Mojave Desert. The hottest air temperature ever recorded in Death Valley in the Mojave was 134 °F (57 °C) on July 10, 1913, at Furnace Creek, which is the hottest atmospheric temperature ever recorded on earth.
The uplifting of the Sierra Nevada Mountains that blocked moisture from the Pacific caused the Mojave Desert to form as a rain shadow desert.
The Mojave Desert is in the rainshadow of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. It is also at a latitude that is generally under high atmospheric pressure that suppresses thunderstorm development.
The Mojave Desert has been known to exceed 130 degrees F. in the summer, especially in Death Valley.
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The highest temperature in Death Valley was at Furnace Creek in 1913 when it reached 134 degrees F.
The hottest air temperature ever reliablymeasured in a desert was 134 degrees F. at Furnace Creek in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert in 1913.The hottest air temperature ever reliably measured in a desert was 134 degrees F. at Furnace Creek in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert in 1913.
The hottest temperature ever reliably measured in a desert was 134 degrees F in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert in 1913.The hottest temperature ever reliably measured in a desert was 134 degrees F in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert in 1913.
The Mojave has measured the hottest temperature of any desert in the world, It is a hot subtropical desert.
The hottest desert in the U.S. is the Mojave which recorded a record high temperature of 134 degrees F. in 1913 at Death Valley.
The Sierra Nevada is a tall mountain range that prevents most of the moisture carried by the wind from the Pacific Ocean from reaching the Mojave Desert.