In New York, a man splashes his face in July, using a fountain as best he can.
In July, the New York Triathlon was canceled because of the heat for the first time ever. The organization donated 1,900 gallons or water and Gatorade to New Yorkers in need.
In Brooklyn, children take the cooling off process a little more seriously.
In July, Mayor Bill de Blasio declared a state of emergency in the city as the heat index was expected to reach 115 degrees.
In Washington Heights, New York, fire hydrants are harnessed to keep cool.
Just don't open it improperly. Every minute a fire hydrant is open illegally, more than 1,000 gallons pour out. To stop water wastage, the New York City Department of Environmental Protection deploys a team of teenagers to inform New Yorkers about the dangers of it. But New Yorkers can request that firefighters open a hydrant to use as a sprinkler — officially.
In Washington D.C., there's no rest for those behind the camera, even in sunny weather. Here, a man keeps himself cool while fulfilling his duties as photographer, in the World War II Memorial.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdCold treats can help. This traveler from Chile is eating a blue slushie.
Outside the big cities, taking one's mind off the heat is a little more on the nose. Here, a pair race down the Guadalupe River, in Texas.
One Texan told The New York Times, "A summer day below 100 degrees is an invigorating as an arctic blast."
And here a woman takes a slightly more measured approach to keeping cool.
In Boston, kids and adults alike cool off in the fountain on the Rose Kennedy Greenway.
In Alaska, a man wields both an umbrella and an icy treat to keep himself and a child cool.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdIn the United Kingdom, a guard does his best to ignore the heat. It requires a jaw-clenching effort.
Britain struggles particularly with the heat – most of its homes aren't built to keep cool; instead they're built to keep warm. It also named one hot day in July "Furnace Friday."
Across the English Channel, Parisians and tourists sit in the shade by the Seine River. One of the best ways to keep cool is to stay out of direct sun.
On July 25, Paris recorded an all-time high temperature – 108.6 degrees Fahrenheit. The Trocadero fountain was opened to the public to keep people cool.
In southern France, an art installation called “Umbrella Sky Project” provides visitors with a photo opportunity and lots of cover from the sun.
This exhibition, made up of hundreds of umbrellas, has been held in cities and towns across the world since 2011.
Where umbrellas aren't available, walls become essential. Knowing where the shade begins in Rome can be vital for survival.
European cities get it worse than suburbia and rural areas when it comes to heat waves. They get almost twice as many, due to concrete and asphalt soaking up the day's heat then releasing it at night.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdElsewhere in the city, fountains provide limited relief. Recently imposed rules now ban people from swimming in them.
Since late 2018, it has been illegal to bathe human or animal body parts in well-known fountains, like the lion fountains in Piazza del Popolo. People who break these rules can be made to leave the city for two days.
So tourists need to keep hydrated other ways.
In Spain, these men happily soak up the sun at the beach.
In the Netherlands, a small pool provides some sort of relief.
Russia is also melting in the heat. Pictured here are people bathing at a beach in St. Petersburg.
If beaches aren't preferable, there's always the Vuoksi River, filled with islands and rapids, which has water that's meant to be cleaner than the Gulf of Finland.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdIn Moscow, girls cool off by the fountain in front of Ostankino Tower.
Moscow has more than 500 fountains, and some of them are worth a lot of money — one called The Stone Flower Fountain cost $18.6 million to restore.
This woman is enjoying a fountain in Alexander Garden in Moscow.
Men in the city take the plunge, leaping off a bridge into the cooling waters of a reservoir.
Like Britain, guards in Russia maintain their positions despite the heat. Here, one soldier wipes the sweat off the brow of another.
While in Siberia, the northern Russian province, 7 million acres of woodland were lost due to wildfires.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdIn Greenland, a visitor walks along the hillside above icebergs floating in the Ilulissat Icefjord. Summers are getting longer in Greenland and its icecap is retreating at an accelerated pace.
Eighty-two percent of Greenland is covered by ice, and by July 31, it had hit a record for melting — 56.5% was melted.
Humpback whales swim next to an iceberg in Greenland. The country's ice sheet was at a record low in 2012, and it looks like it'll be heading back that way if the heat continues.
Here, the ice in Greenland is seen melting rapidly.
In Japan, a taxi driver takes a nap in his car to make the most of air conditioning.
In the Shibuya district, in Tokyo, a woman protects herself from the sun with an umbrella.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdOther women in Tokyo use portable fans to try and cool off.
Some of the highest temperatures were recorded in central Japan, where it reached 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit in Gifu Prefecture at the end of July.
People in Japan have been flocking to the beach this summer. It's one of the few things people near any coast, no matter the country, can rely on.