Guardian Weekly

Too hot for the body and mind to handle

When the temperature hit 40C in Britain last summer, the empty streets appeared “dystopian” to Dr Laurence Wainwright, a sustainability and psychiatry academic at Oxford University. Yet what he had assumed would serve as “a real wake-up call” on the world’s increasingly dangerous temperatures – which resulted in a European heatwave that killed more than 60,000 people last year – failed to prompt action. During the past month – as wildfires have torched more than 500 sq km of Greece, Arizona notched up a recordbreaking 31 consecutive days at 43C or more and July became the hottest month ever recorded in the modern era – the extreme heat crisis has grown. There’s no doubt about it, Wainwright says: “We’re in serious trouble.”

When the human body is exposed to excessive heat, it attempts to maintain its internal temperature by sweating and by

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Guardian Weekly

Guardian Weekly1 min readForeign Language Studies
Puzzles
Find the correct definition: PARISON a) offspring of equal status b) fascinator c) syllables of equal stress d) spherical mass of molten glass One short of a crowd (3) Number of letters in the number is the number (4) Entertain view of one number abo
Guardian Weekly5 min readCrime & Violence
‘Suffering Double Punishment’
The 40 sq metre apartment had everything Hamado Dipama was looking for: one bedroom, a bath and a good location in the southern German city of Augsburg. When he called to set up a viewing, however, the landlord kept asking him where he was from. “It
Guardian Weekly5 min readAmerican Government
Spotlight
When student Lauren Brown first heard the commotion, including firecrackers, she assumed the sounds were coming from nearby frat houses. Then, at about four in the morning, she heard helicopters. Later, she awoke to news and footage of a violent atta

Related Books & Audiobooks