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Saskatchewan

10 heat records broken on Thursday, heat warning continues for southern Sask.

The hot spot was the Lucky Lake area, 90 kilometresnortheast of Swift Current, which hit 36.2 C on Thursday, breaking an old recordof 34.4 C.

The hot spot Thursday was the Lucky Lake area, which hit 36.2 C

A silhouette of a person jogging under the gaze of an orange sky and bright sun.
On July 15, the Lucky Lake area hit 36.2 C.That broke the old record for July 15of 34.4 C, set in 1973. (Charlie Riedel/Associated Press)

Ten hot weather records were broken in Saskatchewan on Thursday, andheat warnings are in place for all of the province's south on Saturday, according to Environment Canada.

Thursday's hot spot was the Lucky Lake area, 90 kilometresnortheast of Swift Current, which hit 36.2 C.That broke the old record for July 15of 34.4 C, set in 1973.

Lucky Lake is having a very hot summer. On July 2, it hit 40 C which was the hottest day ever recorded in that area, according to Environment Canada.

Meanwhile, a number of July 15 heat records were broken in the north. Buffalo Narrows, Collins Bay, Waskesiu and Meadow Lake all hit new highs.

The Last Mountain Lake Sanctuary area beat its 2001 record of 32.7 C, popping up to34.1 C.

Melfort, NipawinandWatrousall bounced up on Thursday. Meanwhile, Weyburn tied its own record of 33.9 C,set in 1960.

And finally, Wynyard set a new record of 32.5 C. The old record of 30.2 C was set in 2001.

The areas in red are under a heat warning as of Saturday morning, according to Environment Canada. (Environment Canada)

As of Saturday morning, all of southern Saskatchewan is under a heat warning, as is the city of Lloydminster, Environment Canada says, with the prolonged heat wave continuingacross the southern Prairies.

Daytime highs will be in the low to mid-30s, with overnight lows in the high teens to near 20 C, the weather agency says.

A few regions will see highs in the upper 20sat the start of next week,but intense heat is expected after that, according to Environment Canada. Daytime highs will once again reachinto the 30s through the restof next week, the agency says.