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High of 85 in Orange County Equals 82-Year-Old Record

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Times Staff Writer

Orange County tied an 82-year-old record for a warm January day, while the National Weather Service continued to insist that the midwinter heat wave is over.

By 3 p.m., the mercury in Santa Ana and San Juan Capistrano had risen to 85 degrees--tying a mark set in Anaheim in 1904.

At Los Angeles Civic Center, the high was 86 degrees--topping the old Jan. 13 record of 85, also set in 1904--while the Monday morning low of 61 had tied the former record for the highest minimum reading, which was set in 1980.

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That also made Los Angeles, officially, the hottest place in the 48 contiguous states--a distinction shared with San Gabriel and Miramar, which also posted maximums of 86. But this mark was topped--unofficially--by Imperial Beach, National City and Poway, where readings of 87 were reported, and by Spring Valley, which recorded 89.

The Weather Service said it really shouldn’t have happened:

A high-pressure system inland that had kept humidity low, temperatures high and skies clear for most of last week was weakening and moving eastward. Meanwhile a Pacific frontal system edging toward the coast was supposed to bring rain to Northern and Central California while covering the Southland with a blanket of clouds Monday.

But that frontal system--blocked, perhaps, by the high pressure inland that did not seem to drift away or break up quite on schedule--seemed to be moving a bit more slowly than anticipated.

As a result, meteorologists explained, the dry winds from the desert just kept on blowing and relative humidity ranged from a high of 31% shortly before dawn to a dry-as-desert-dust 12% during the afternoon.

Nonetheless, forecasters insisted that the edge of the weather front will pass through Southern California today, trailing considerable cloudiness and--maybe--a few sprinkles.

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