Weather

Heat Records Fall Across The Southland With More To Come

A second straight day of extreme heat shattered records across Los Angeles Friday, and unseasonable warm weather will last all weekend.

LOS ANGELES, CA — Record fall temperatures, again, baked the Southland Friday with temperatures nearing triple digits in some places. The heatwave is expected to last through the weekend.

Heat records fell from Oxnard to coastal Orange County, according to the National Weather Service.

“It’s definitely above average, climatologically speaking,” said Adam Roser, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in San Diego told the Los Angeles Times. “Some daily records are definitely going to be broken today.”

Find out what's happening in Los Angelesfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The mercury hit a record 92 degrees Friday in Oxnard, breaking the previous Nov. 12 mark of 88, set in 1942, according to the National Weather Service. That came a day after a record high of 90 for the date was tied at Hollywood Burbank Airport, matching the mark set in 1974.

At noon Friday, it was 98 degrees in Santa Ana, 93 in Van Nuys, 92 in Long Beach, 88 in downtown L.A. and 86 at LAX.

Find out what's happening in Los Angelesfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

High pressure aloft and Santa Ana winds are expected to keep conditions very warm and dry through Saturday, with gradual cooling Sunday and Monday, according to the weather service.

"Areas of northeast winds along the coastal foothills will peak (Friday), then weaken," according to the NWS.

"High temperatures will be well above normal through the weekend, but an increasing sea breeze will bring some cooling to the coast."

Forecasters said stronger onshore flow will drag fog and low clouds inland next week, bringing back cooler and more humid marine air.

The forecast for Friday and Saturday called for highs to the mid-80s at the beaches to the mid-90s inland, along with winds 15 to 26 mph, gusting to 35.

Temps should dip into he mid-80s inland Sunday and Monday before dropping into the more seasonable 70s beginning Tuesday, the NWS said.

City News Service and Patch Staffer Paige Austin contributed to this report.

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.