Temperatures in July reached 100 degrees Fahrenheit, above the normal high temperature of 72.3 degrees.
It was also during the week where a number of dead fish started to occur along the riverine segment.
In July, Norton Sound water surface temperatures reached 68.2 DEG F on 7/10 and 69.3 DEG F on 7/11, which is about 17 degrees above average. The water was warm enough to comfortably swim in.
This July was the warmest ever recorded in Reykjavík. In some other parts of the country, July was among the top three or four ever recorded.
Our operations and maintenance staff do their best to insure all mechanical systems are functioning properly. But several factors limited their ability to respond, including significant smoke from the Swan Lake wildfire.
As record high temperatures swept Alaska, many people said that the heat was killing them. For Kuskokwim salmon, it was actually true.