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Imagine Minnesota is like a big oven that someone turned up too high. According to FOX 9, the state is facing a stretch of dangerous heat with temperatures soaring well above normal and warnings in place across the state. There’s even a video asking: "MN weather: How long will the extreme heat last?" because the heat wave continues on Monday and people wonder how long we’ll be "in the oven."
The National Weather Service (a team of weather watchers) has extended an Extreme Heat Warning—think of it as a big "too hot!" alert—into Thursday evening. Temperatures are dangerously high.
Here’s a simple order of events:
[!IMPORTANT]
The heat index hitting triple digits means outdoor activities can be dangerous. Always treat this heat seriously!
Let’s look at some specific spots and numbers to see how hot it got:
Prolonged heat waves (long periods of hot days) can increase the risk of heat-related illnesses (sickness from heat), especially for:
The National Weather Service’s warning covers the entire state of Minnesota, but the impact is especially noticeable in:
[!IMPORTANT]
- Warning lasts until Thursday evening.
- Heat feels like 100°F+ because of humidity.
- Whole state warned, but Twin Cities & northern MN feel it most.
- Kids, seniors, and no-AC folks need extra care.
Minnesota is in a dangerous hot stretch. The National Weather Service has an Extreme Heat Warning extended to Thursday evening. Daytime temps are mid-90s, nights only cool to 70s, and it feels like 100+ with humidity. Twin Cities hit 93°F (9° above normal), Ely 98°F, Bismarck ND 105°F. This may be the first 5-day 90s streak since 2023. The heat can sicken children, seniors, and those without AC. The whole state is warned, but Twin Cities and northern MN are especially hit. Info comes from FOX 9 meteorologists and the National Weather Service.
It’s like a big red flag from the National Weather Service saying, "It’s dangerously hot, be careful!" In Minnesota, it’s extended until Thursday evening.
It’s the "feels-like" temperature. You take the actual temperature and add the stickiness of the air (humidity). Here, it’s over 100°F, so it feels like a super hot oven.
The warning says at least until Thursday evening. The heat wave continues from Monday, and the hot feel lasts all week.
Children, seniors, and people without air conditioning are more likely to get sick. The warning covers all of Minnesota, but Twin Cities and northern MN notice it strongly.
The source is FOX 9 meteorologists (weather experts) and the National Weather Service.