It’s not your imagination: It’s really hot for September in the South

September 11, 2019
1 min read
It's not your imagination: It's really hot for September in the South

Record-challenging heat will continue to make it feel like the middle of summer across much of the southern United States this week.

The scorching heat was enough to set daily record temperatures in places like Jacksonville, Florida, and Charleston, South Carolina, this past Saturday. The record-challenging heat will continue to grip much of the South through week’s end as an expansive dome of high pressure controls the region’s weather.

Normal high temperatures for the second week of September across the South range from the middle 80s to lower 90s F.

Highs in the middle 90s to near 100 are forecast over a broad area.

AccuWeather RealFeel® Temperatures will be several degrees higher than the actual temperature during the mid- to late-afternoon hours.

Temperatures will peak within a few degrees of daily record highs in Atlanta this week.

Records date back to as early as 1900, which is the case on Thursday. Back in 1925, there was an eight-day string of record highs that remain in tact from Sept. 3 through 10.

Atlanta fell one degree short of Monday’s record high of 100 from 1925. More recent daily records set on Wednesday and Thursday may be broken.

Atlanta is not the only city that will be challenging record-high temperatures this week. Nashville and New Orleans, as well as Montgomery and Birmingham, Alabama, and dozens of other locations will all experience record-challenging heat.

Numerous records were tied or broken across the South on Tuesday, Sept. 10.

Adding in other factors like humidity, wind and the amount of sunlight, Accuweather RealFeel® Temperatures will exceed the century mark for much of the South.

On top of the heat, the air mass overhead will also limit the chances for a cooling shower or thunderstorm. Portions of the Deep South and Southeast are in a slight to moderate drought, and the upcoming forecast would only suggest these drought areas will expand in the coming week.

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