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The June that recently ended was the Earth's hottest — ever. And the first week of July saw the trend continue. The surging summer temperatures made me wonder: Just how much heat can the human body stand?
Deaths from heat are pretty common, and as the world heats up, may become more so if we don't develop a plan for extreme heat days, like the kind of warning system that usually comes before a major hurricane or blizzard. In 2019, approximately 469,000 people worldwide died from overheating, according to a paper published in 2021 in the Lancet.
Heat is sometimes called the silent killer, said Ollie Jay, director of the Heat and Health Research Incubator at the University of Sydney. It doesn't make for dramatic television footage the way tsunamis and tornados and floods do. "People who die are often old, they're socially isolated, they're living in low-income settings, they're often not found for days after they've died," he said. We don't recognize the dangers.
Whether a given temperature can kill depends on humidity, wind velocity and direct exposure to sunlight as well as a person's level of exertion, body size and clothing. Temperatures reportedly reached 119 degrees Fahrenheit where a man and his young stepson died hiking last month in Texas, but just 107 when a young couple, their baby daughter, and the family dog all died in 2021 while hiking in California.
That California case was chronicled in the book "The Heat Will Kill You First," by Jeff Goodell. The young parents had brought what seemed like ample water. When they set out, the temperature was only in the 70s. They had planned to be home before the worst heat set in. But the hike started downhill. Getting back to their car required a 2,300 foot climb up a slope in direct sunlight. They never made it.
Heat can kill because our bodies are made of cells contained with membranes that will, if hot enough, melt. While we think of ourselves as warm-blooded animals, biologists would call us homeothermic — we need to maintain a core temperature within a narrow range around 98 F.