A massive heat dome threatens to deliver scorching triple-digit temperatures across 14 US states in the Southwest, arriving three months earlier than typical summer norms as winter draws to a close.
Meteorologists predict temperatures 15 to 30 degrees above mid-March averages in California, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, New Mexico, Colorado, Wyoming, and portions of Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. The extreme event persists through Thursday, with potential extension into the weekend.
Understanding Heat Domes
High-pressure systems create heat domes by capping the atmosphere, trapping warm air near the surface, blocking clouds, and amplifying sunlight exposure. A ridge in the jet stream exacerbates this, diverting storms and cooler air.
AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Alan Reppert explains: “Heat domes are a lot like a balloon. They expand and contract as the day goes by, and when you are inside of it, it can be a very warm.”
Record-Breaking Forecasts
Los Angeles faces 98 degrees Fahrenheit on Wednesday, with a push to 100 degrees potentially shattering the earliest such mark set in 1874. Phoenix anticipates consecutive 100-degree days—101 on Wednesday and 104 on Thursday—far exceeding March norms in the mid-70s. The city’s prior March 100-degree record dates to March 26, 1988.
Las Vegas, usually in the low 70s this time of year, could eclipse its earliest 100-degree day record from May 1, 1947. Death Valley may hit 108 degrees by Wednesday, the soonest temperature above 105 degrees on record.
Denver braces for its earliest 90-degree day since 1992, surpassing the previous April 30 benchmark by five weeks. Dozens of cities from Montana to southern California and Arizona eye new warmth records.
Broader Impacts
The surge risks rapid vegetation drying, heightening wildfire potential in Texas, Oklahoma, and New Mexico. It threatens the superbloom—wildflower displays in desert regions—and could evaporate temporary winter lakes, including in Death Valley.
AccuWeather Meteorologist Elizabeth Danco states: “This heat is arriving far earlier than normal, with temperatures in parts of the Southwest running one to two months ahead of historical averages.”

