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WEATHER
Heat waves

Dangerous heat wave to scorch U.S.

Doyle Rice
USA TODAY

Temperatures over 100 degrees and brutally high humidity will combine to deliver a potentially dangerous heat wave to much of the central and southern U.S. this week.

Satine Levan, 13, of Schuylkill Haven, Pa., cools off at a pool in Pottsville, Pa., on July 6, 2016. A potent heat wave will send folks to the pool again this week across the country.

"This may be one of the worst heat waves in the last few decades," the National Weather Service warned.

Some 130 million Americans will endure heat indexes of at least 100 degrees, according to the Weather Channel

The intense heat will spread into the mid-Atlantic and Northeast by next weekend. Only the Northwest will not feel the full effects of the heat wave.

This will be the hottest weather so far this summer in the central U.S., AccuWeather said. Heat advisories and warnings have been posted in 16 states in the central and southern U.S., the weather service said.

Cities such as Dallas, Chicago, Oklahoma City, Kansas City, St. Louis and Des Moines are all in the zone of extreme heat. Some daily record high temperatures are possible in a few locations, but no all-time records seem likely.

Milwaukee, Chicago, Detroit and Toledo could see 100-degree temperatures on Friday, WeatherBell meteorologist Ryan Maue said.

The heat index — which factors in both temperatures and humidity — could approach 120 degrees in some spots.

"This type of heat can cause heat stroke if you don’t take precautions, so be sure to drink plenty of water and if possible avoid being out in the sun between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.," according to WeatherBug meteorologist Andrew Rosenthal.

"More people die each year from heat than cold waves, lightning, tornadoes, hurricanes or floods," AccuWeather meteorologist Alex Sosnowski said.

The heat is due to a massive dome of high pressure that's predicted to camp out over the Plains and Midwest for much of the week, weather.com said. High pressure causes air to sink, preventing clouds and rain from forming.

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