An intense and nearly historic weather pattern is cooking much of America under a dangerous heat dome this week with triple-digit temperatures in places that haven’t been so hot in more than a decade.

The heat wave is especially threatening because it’s hitting cities like Boston, New York and Philadelphia early in the summer when people haven’t gotten their bodies adapted to the broiling conditions, several meteorologists said. The dome of high pressure that’s parking over the eastern United States is trapping hot air from the Southwest that already made an uncomfortable stop in the Midwest.

Twin Cities relief

In the Twin Cities, temperatures and humidity fell back Monday following an oppressive weekend of heat indices sometimes topping 110 degrees. Saturday’s high temperature of 96 broke the daily record of 95, dating to 1910. Sunday’s high of 95 fell 3 degrees short of a record.

A key measurement of the strength of the high pressure broke a record Monday and was the third-highest reading for any date, making for a “near historic” heat wave, said private meteorologist Ryan Maue, a former National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration chief scientist. The worst of the heat was likely to peak for Northeastern cities on Tuesday, forecasters said.

“Like an air fryer, it’s going to be hot,” Maue said. ”This is a three-day stretch of dangerous heat that will test the mettle of city dwellers who are most vulnerable to oppressive heat waves.”

A heat dome occurs when a large area of high pressure in the upper atmosphere acts as a reservoir, trapping heat and humidity. A heat wave is the persistence of heat, usually three days or more, with unusually hot temperatures.

Where the heat is on now

Nearly three-quarters of the country’s population — 245 million people — sweltered with 90 degrees or higher temperatures on Monday, and 33 million people, almost 10% of the country, will feel blistering 100-degree heat on Tuesday, Maue said. The government’s heat health website showed the highest level of heat risk in swaths from Chicago to Pittsburgh and North Carolina to New York.

Those triple-digit air temperatures — with the feels-like index even worse because of humidity — are possible in places where it’s unusual. New York hasn’t seen 100 degrees since 2011 and Philadelphia, which is forecast to have consecutive triple-digit days, hasn’t reached that mark since 2012, said Climate Central chief meteorologist Bernadette Woods Placky.

In downtown Baltimore, temperatures climbed into the high 90s by early Monday afternoon, bringing dozens of people to cool off at St. Vincent de Paul’s resource center. A few blocks away, the city’s historic Broadway Market food hall closed early when the building’s air conditioning broke.

NOAA meteorologist David Roth said it takes time to acclimate to summer heat and this heat dome could be a shock for some.

“You’re talking about some places that could be 40 degrees warmer than last week. So that’s a big deal,” he said.

Climate change’s role

The heat is part of Earth’s long-term warming. Summers in the United States are 2.4 degrees hotter than 50 years ago, according to NOAA data. Human-caused climate change has made this heat wave three times more likely than without the burning of coal, oil and gas, the climate science nonprofit Climate Central calculated, using computer simulations comparing the current weather to a fictional world without the industrial greenhouse gases.

A key question is how much humidity will add to the discomfort and danger of the heat.

Maue is forecasting dry air which may be a degree or two or three hotter than predicted by NOAA, but more comfortable. Other meteorologists expected worse: Sticky, humid and even more dangerous.

“The ‘big deal’ will be with the humidity being provided with the wet late spring conditions,” said University of Oklahoma meteorology professor Jason Furtado. “The area of high pressure will allow for a lot of evaporation to occur from the wet grounds locally and regionally, which will increase the heat indices quite a bit.”