ap

Skip to content

Fingerprints of climate change found across Colorado’s Rocky Mountains amid world’s hottest month on record

Firefighters gaze on the Spring Creek Fire burning in Garfield County. After igniting in June, this firefighters continued to battle this blaze for days into July 2023, which saw record-breaking heat along Colorado's Western Slope. (Tony Marzo, Summit Fire & EMS)
Firefighters gaze on the Spring Creek Fire burning in Garfield County. After igniting in June, this firefighters continued to battle this blaze for days into July 2023, which saw record-breaking heat along Colorado’s Western Slope. (Tony Marzo, Summit Fire & EMS)
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...
As the earth roasted last month, reaching a global average temperature that scientists have confirmed to be the highest on record for any month, the Colorado High Country got an uneven sampling of the heat.
Already have an account Log In
This article is only available to subscribers
Trusted Local News

Standard Digital

$1 for 1 year
Offer valid for non-subscribers only

RevContent Feed

More in Environment