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This seems like a pretty obvious candidate for merging with wet-bulb temperature but meteorology is way out of my field, so instead of merging immediately I wanted to find out if there's an important distinction. Wintersweet (talk) 14:20, 7 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Support. There's even already a section on that page "Wet-bulb temperature and health". This seems like a clear target location.-Ich(talk)14:56, 7 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
The author of the Vice article simply misunderstood the meaning of "wet bulb temperature", writing that "Wet bulb temperature is the point at which humidity and heat hit a point where evaporation due to sweat no longer works to cool a person." This is clearly not an accurate sentence if you compare it to the article on wet-bulb temperature. The other two sources use "wet-bulb temperature" in the standard way, as a measurement that can be high or low, and don't use the weird phrase "wet-bulb conditions" at all. A wet-bulb temperature exists everywhere on Earth. The two reliable sources are mis-cited to support claims they don't make (that "wet-bulb conditions" is a term meaning "wet-bulb temperature above 35° C"). This article should just be deleted; wet-bulb temperature already prominently features information about the human survivability limit for that measurement. Patallurgist (talk) 12:29, 21 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@Patallurgist: This is all true. The article is extremely short; "leading to the death of otherwise healthy persons" is a risibly false statement that borders on WP:FRINGE It seems to me like someone has misunderstood the terminology here. "Wet-bulb conditions" based on wet-bulb temperatures are about as much of a thing as "dusty conditions" based on dust levels or "loud conditions" based on noise pollution. None of these are separate articles, because none of them are separate concepts. I am going to merge this one as well. jp×g20:13, 21 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]