No Result
View All Result
Thursday, August 7, 2025
23 °c
Tripoli
24 ° Sat
24 ° Sun
  • Advertising
  • Contact
LibyaHerald
  • Home
  • Libya
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • Magazine
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Register
SUBSCRIBE
  • Home
  • Libya
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • Magazine
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Register
No Result
View All Result
LibyaHerald
No Result
View All Result
Home Features

Libya loses ‘world’s hottest place’ record

byNigel Ash
September 15, 2012
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
Libya loses ‘world’s hottest place’ record

A 1923 photograph showing the Italian fort in El Azizia

By Tom Westcott.

A 1923 photograph showing the Italian fort in El Azizia

Tripoli, 15 September:

New research has led to Libya being stripped of its 90-year record as the hottest place on . . .[restrict]earth, according to the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO).

Libya has held the record since 1922 when, on 13 September, the temperature at an Italian fort in El Azizia was recorded to be 58 degrees celsius (136.4 degrees fahrenheit). For the last 90 years, the country has remained two degrees fahrenheit hotter than any other place on earth, until a query from weather historian Christopher C. Burt, prompted an investigation.  

Suspicious about the high temperature, Burt did some research, which included contacting Khalid Ibrahim El Fadli, director of the climate department at the Libyan National Meteorological Center (LNMC) in Tripoli. On his ‘weather historian’ blog on wunderground.com, Burt writes: “El Fadli’s enthusiastic and gracious response (to provide all and any weather data I might be interested in) was beyond my expectations.” 

RELATED POSTS

Minister of Economy discusses regulating priorities of market needs and import budget

Minister of Economy discusses trade movement through Ras Jedir Libyan Tunisian land border

Randall Cerveny, the WMO’s Rapporteur of Weather and Climate Extremes, has said that following Burt’s research and query, a committee of meteorological experts was formed to analyse the data and historical records. The investigation then began on 8 February 2011.  

Burt wrote that: “Amazingly, El Fadli had just uncovered a key document: the actual log sheet of the observations made at Azizia in September 1922.” It was in this document that an intriguing anomaly was discovered. Two days before the reading of 58 degrees celsius, a new person had taken over the job of observing temperatures. And this unknown figure had made a key error in his record-keeping, incorrectly recording the data.   

Cerveny said: “When we looked at the original 1922 log-sheet, we found that the observer had put the numbers in the wrong columns” suggesting he was not used to doing weather observation work.” He added that, when the observations were compared to surrounding locations and earlier and later observations at the site, they didn’t match up.

Research was suddenly interrupted by the revolution, not least because according to Burt, Qaddafi, in a televised speech, “made an ominous reference to how NATO forces were using Libyan climate data to plan their assault on the country.” The committee lost contact with El Fadli, and the investigations were put on hold. 

Having survived his car being shot at during the revolution, El Fadli resurfaced in August and the investigations were able to continue. Using new technologies, data and conditions were analysed and these showed that the recorded temperature of 58 degrees celsius was inordinately high. A further problem was identified with the equipment used on 13 September 1922.
  
Ceverny said: “The instrument that they used was not the proper instrument used to take temperatures at this particular time. The regular thermometer had broken a few days earlier, so they had to find one, and they found a Bellani-Six thermometer.”

The Bellani-Six is an old-style household thermometer that uses a combination of alcohol and mercury as its way of finding maximum and minimum temperatures. “It’s a very odd instrument and very difficult to use properly, and we’re pretty sure the person tasked with taking the measurements with this instrument didn’t know how to use it” said Ceverny.

He added: “Using this instrument it’s pretty easy to make an error of reading we think he read on the wrong side of the scale and so was off by five degrees celsius. This meant that, if you adjusted for that, there was no 58 degree celsius recorded in El Azizia”

In their report, the WMO evaluation committee concluded that “the most compelling scenario for the1922 event was that a new and inexperienced observer, not trained in the use of an unsuitable replacement instrument, a Bellani-Six thermometer, that can be easily misread, did inadequately record the observation, using the wrong end of the recording pin and was consequently off in the observation by about seven degrees celsius.” 
The report concluded: “Because no conclusive on-site evidence, beyond the original observer log sheet, exists, no definitive determination of the extreme can be made at this late date. However, the WMO panel of experts unanimously concur that the five above-mentioned areas of concern are sufficient to invalidate the temperature extreme of 58 degrees celsius at El Azizia, as the world’s official highest recorded temperature”
The 58 degrees celsius record from El Azizia has now been replaced by a reading of 134 degrees fahrenheit from Death Valley in California, America, recorded in 1913. 

A short documentary, ‘Dead Heat: Overturning the World’s Hottest Temperature’ which tells the story of the investigation, can be watched here: http://www.wunderground.com/deadheat
[/restrict]

Related Posts

Book review: From Jerusalem to a Kingdom by the Sea. By Adel Dajani
Features

Book review: From Jerusalem to a Kingdom by the Sea. By Adel Dajani

March 13, 2021
IOM Learns of ‘Slave Market’ Conditions Endangering Migrants in North Africa
Features

IOM Learns of ‘Slave Market’ Conditions Endangering Migrants in North Africa

April 12, 2017
Libyan cultural show in Tunis viewed as success – calls for more such events
Features

Libyan cultural show in Tunis viewed as success – calls for more such events

March 18, 2017
Libyan heritage in danger since the revolution, archaeologists warn
Features

Libyan heritage in danger since the revolution, archaeologists warn

March 22, 2017
Young Libyan artists grow in vision and number in the midst of civil conflict
Features

Young Libyan artists grow in vision and number in the midst of civil conflict

March 18, 2017
Wheelus Air Force Base – as seen by a British film star
Features

Wheelus Air Force Base – as seen by a British film star

October 25, 2016
Next Post

Turkey invites Abushagur to visit

No Libyans died in Benghazi attack

ADVERTISEMENT

Top Stories

  • LAIP delegation visits Maputo, Mozambique to recover seized rice project

    LAIP to focus on several internal investment projects – to improve quality of life and local development

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Tripoli Defence Ministry warns of unspecified precision air strikes against human smugglers and drug traffickers

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • CBL to bring FX rate of dinar to less than LD 7 per US$: CBL Governor Issa

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Tripoli Libyan government’s official tendering and procurement website ‘‘Attaat’’ is operational

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Minister of Oil and Gas discusses with Japanese Ambassador strengthening cooperation and attracting Japanese companies to Libya’s energy sector

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
ADVERTISEMENT
LibyaHerald

The Libya Herald first appeared on 17 February 2012 – the first anniversary of the Libyan Revolution. Since then, it has become a favourite go-to source on news about Libya, for many in Libya and around the world, regularly attracting millions of hits.

Recent News

Minister of Economy discusses regulating priorities of market needs and import budget

Minister of Economy discusses trade movement through Ras Jedir Libyan Tunisian land border

Sitemap

  • Why subscribe?
  • Terms & Conditions
  • FAQs
  • Copyright & Intellectual Property Rights
  • Subscribe now

Newsletters

    Be the first to know latest important news & events directly to your inbox.

    Sending ...

    By signing up, I agree to our TOS and Privacy Policy.

    © 2022 LibyaHerald - Powered by Sparx Solutions.

    Welcome Back!

    Login to your account below

    Forgotten Password? Sign Up

    Create New Account!

    Fill the forms below to register

    *By registering into our website, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.
    All fields are required. Log In

    Retrieve your password

    Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

    Log In
    No Result
    View All Result
    • Login
    • Sign Up
    • Libya
    • Business
    • Advertising
    • About us
    • BusinessEye Magazine
    • Letters
    • Features
    • Why subscribe?
    • FAQs
    • Contact

    © 2022 LibyaHerald - Powered by Sparx Solutions.

    This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.