After a few days of a winter heat wave that brought summer-like temperatures, Southern California will see a shift going into ...
New research reveals residents in America's hottest cities may age 14 months faster biologically. Discover which 6 cities ...
Longer periods of extreme heat has been found to accelerate biological age in older adults by up to two years, according to new research.
A tornado ripped through Oxnard on Valentine's Day, damaging roofs and carports as residents took shelter inside their homes. KTLA's Rachel Menitoff reports on Feb. 14, 2025. Details: <a href ...
A billboard displays a temperature of 118 degrees F during a record heat wave in Phoenix, Arizona ... a postdoctoral gerontological researcher at the University of Southern California’s Leonard Davis ...
Forecasters say below-average temperatures are likely to linger into mid-March. The National Weather Service said SoCal could ...
A billboard displays a temperature of 118 degrees F during a record heat wave in Phoenix ... researcher at the University of Southern California’s Leonard Davis School of Gerontology and ...
In the United States alone, the average heat wave season has been 46 days longer ... Phoenix and Tucson in southern Arizona, Brownsville and Laredo in southern Texas, and Florida’s Miami and ...
The study by researchers at the University of Southern California involved almost ... We also know periods of extreme heat trigger a wave of illness and death, especially among older people.
The record-breaking temperatures come at the tail end of a minor February heat wave that warmed up the Central Coast and Southern California this week. The warm weather is not expected to last ...
UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain described the event as a “genuine winter ‘heat wave’” in a post on X, with temperatures potentially reaching the low 90s in Southern California.