IMD officials suggest that people should drink plenty of water as March has a history of recording extreme temperatures
This picture has been used for representational purpose
Mumbaikars on Saturday experienced intense hot weather as the city recorded a maximum temperature of 40.9 degrees celsius. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) Deputy Director-General of Meteorology K.S. Hosalikar said that Santacruz recorded 40.9 degree celsius while Colaba recorded 38 degrees.
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Some of the highest Tmax recorded today 27 Mar, in Maharashtra:
— K S Hosalikar (@Hosalikar_KS) March 27, 2021
Santacruz 40.9 Colaba 38
Malegaon 39.8 Pune 38.1 Nasik 38.2 Parbhani 39.5 Jalna 38 A' bad 38.2
Klp 38.2 Sangli 38.2 Slp 40.4
Jalgaon 40.4 Satara 38 Akola 40.4 Chandrapur 41.2 Bramhapuri 39.9 Amravati & Gadchiroli 39 pic.twitter.com/KTRI9ursqb
Hosalikar, on his social media page posted about the weather in the state. According to his post, Malegaon recorded 39.8 degrees, Pune 38.1, Nasik 38.2, and Parbhani 39.5 degrees celsius. Sharing information about weather in other places in Maharashtra, Hosalikar tweeted that Jalgaon recorded 40.4 degree celsius, Satara 38 degrees, Akola 40.4 degrees, Chandrapur 41.2 degrees, Bramhapuri 39.9 degrees and Gadchiroli was sizzling at 39 degrees.
Speaking about the heatwave that Mumbai and Maharashtra was witnessing, an IMD official told mid-day that people should take care and drink plenty of water as March has a history of recording extreme temperatures.
Elaborating further on the heatwave, the official added, “This drop in temperature will be caused due to the westerly winds that blow inwards from over the sea, but they increase the moisture content in the air, a phenomenon called The Marine Influence.
Mumbaikars will have to sweat it out initially while their bodies adapt to the shift in temperatures, the official concluded.