Tuesday was Australia's hottest day on record, according to preliminary data from the Bureau of Meteorology (BOM).
The average maximum temperature across the country was 40.9C, breaking the mark of 40.3C set in January 2013, but it's a record unlikely to last for long.
Temperatures got up to well over 45C for much of the interior - the location record (50.7C at Oodnadatta) is still safe - but the wide spread of exceptional heat meant the national average record was broken.
The heat is expected to keep building over the next few days as the air mass moves across the country.
A few of the standout temperatures on Tuesday included:
- Ceduna (SA) - 46.5
- Birdsville (Qld) - 46.1
- Lajamanu (NT) - 46
- Rabbit Flat (NT) - 45.8
- Jervois (NT) - 45.6
- Longreach (Qld) - 45.3
- Trepell (Qld) - 45
- Oodnadatta (SA) - 44.9
Oodnadatta reached a maximum of 44.7C on Wednesday but is forecast to get to 48C on Thursday and 47C on Friday, before cooling slightly to 44C on Saturday.
Oak Valley, further to the west in outback South Australia, is predicted to reach 49C on Thursday.
Closer to the coast, the heat is far from over for Adelaide - daily maximums for West Terrace are forecast to reach 44C on Thursday and 44C on Friday, when the fire danger is also expected to peak.
Further east, Canberra has been experiencing severe heatwave conditions that are forecast to continue into the weekend, with the hottest day expected to be Saturday (42C).
Even before yesterday's record temperatures, Perth man Stu Pengelly posted Facebook he'd cooked a 1.5k pork roast in his car on Friday.
And as the heatwave continues, the New South Wales fire service said bushfires had burned through 2.7 million hectares across the east of the state, the most land on burned on modern record.
Why so hot?
This week's heat is the result of widespread drought combined with a late onset of the monsoon in the north.
Without moisture around to cool things down, temperatures have continued to build as summer sets in.
Both the delayed monsoon and the drought are linked to a climate driver called the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD), which directs the flow of moisture over the Indian Ocean.
This year has been one of the strongest positive IOD events on record, meaning warm rising air in the ocean's west has led to wet conditions in eastern Africa and encouraged the monsoon in India, while bringing dry conditions to Australia.
The positive IOD is expected to break down when the monsoon eventually makes its way south, but that is likely to be much later than the usual arrival around Christmas.
When is it going to end?
Australia is going to keep experiencing drought and bushfire conditions until there is widespread rain, but there is no promising chance of this in the short- or long-term outlooks.
More immediately, the next cold front is expected to move through and bring a cooler change to Western Australia on Thursday but won't make it to the more highly populated east of South Australia until late Friday.
This means that temperatures and fire danger will peak for SA on Friday, as hot dry winds are drawn down from central Australia.
Adelaide's forecast maximum of 45C on Friday will be followed by a top of 26C on Saturday - a phenomenal 19-degree drop in the peak temperature from one day to the next.
Friday will also be the hottest day for Tasmania and southern Victoria, where Melbourne is forecast to reach 43C.
The cold front will continue east, moving through New South Wales on Saturday, again bringing high temperatures and fire danger before a cool change.
Locations close to the coast will likely benefit from a sea breeze but those inland will swelter.
Penrith is forecast to hit 45C on Thursday, drop to a maximum of 33C on Friday, before heating up again to 46C on Saturday.
In contrast, Bondi is expected to peak at 37C on Thursday, be cooler on Friday before reaching 29C on Saturday.
Low to severe heatwave conditions are expected to linger in Queensland through into the weekend, pushing further towards the coast as the week progresses.
- ABC