Spyke
earthscience·Earth, Environment, and GeosciencesbyGlennMagusHarvey

South Florida sea surface temperature recorded at over 100°F

It was already bad when the sea surface temperature was well over 90 degrees Fahrenheit last week, but...over 100?

https://nbc-2.com/weather/weather-blog/2023/07/25/buoy-in-florida-keys-measures-101-1-degree-water-temperature/ (this is the article linked above)

FYI that's hot tub hot, as this other article notes: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/weather/hot-tub-water-temperatures-florida-soar-100-degrees-stunning-experts-rcna96163

This might be record-breaking. In the worst sense possible.

(this is a repost of my own toot, with additional elaboration and minus hashtags)

South Florida sea surface temperature recorded at over 100°Fhttps://nbc-2.com/weather/weather-blog/2023/07/25/buoy-in-florida-keys-measures-101-1-degree-water-temperature/Open linkView original on mander.xyz
lemmy.sdf.org

Of all the life altering events that climate change will bring upon us I never stopped to think of the beaches. Will someone please think of the beaches?!

Seriously though, this sucks. Living in a world where it gets so hot you can’t even jump in the water to cool off is going to be rough.

6

For what it's worth, according to Google Maps, that's probably not much of a beach spot; forests (presumably mangrove forests) seem to line much of the land on the edge of Manatee Bay.

2

I think 37°C is 98.6°F, i.e. normal human body temperature. This is, somehow, hotter. But the sea being even near this temperature is...a problem.

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mander.xyz

This the temp of the water - absolutely insane. At what point does the life die off? Is this common in this area?

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mander.xyz

I think this area is relatively shallow so it can get hotter than the bulk of the seawater in deeper parts, but these are still crazy high temperatures...

1

That makes sense. Still, it's hard to imagine a swimming pool in Arizona getting this hot!

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