Death Valley World Record of 134 deg. F Debunked in New Paper

A historic temperature measurement station in a desert landscape, featuring a white wooden fence and a sign indicating directions to various locations, with mountains in the background.

Roy Spencer, PhD

October 11th, 2025 by Roy W. Spencer, Ph. D.

A silhouette of a person wearing a hat, standing on a wooden porch, overlooking a vast desert valley with mountains in the background. The image is in black and white.

Our paper entitled Death Valley Illusion: Evidence Against the 134 Deg. F World Record has been published as an early online release in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. The authors are myself, Dr. John Christy, and climatologist and storm chaser Bill Reid.

Several meteorologists over the years have questioned the plausibility of the 134 deg. F world record hottest temperature recorded at Greenland Ranch, California, on July 10, 1913, but quantitative evidence has been lacking. We used 100 years of temperatures recorded at higher-elevation (and thus cooler) locations to find a range of temperatures that most likely occurred on that date.

The answer was 120 (+/-2) deg. F, typical for Death Valley in July, and well below the world record value of 134 deg. F. I have previously blogged on the evidence against this value and how and why it might have been recorded.

While I remain a skeptic of anthropogenic climate change being a net threat to human health and welfare, unlike some other skeptics I have never considered a temperature on a single day (especially over 100 years ago) as being any kind of evidence related to climate change. We follow the data, which is what we did in this new study.

NOTEIf you are commenting here for the first time, your first comment will need to be approved by me before it appears. That might take a day or a week, depending upon how busy I am, so be patient.



Discover more from Climate- Science.press

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.