Sunday, October 31, 2021

Our picks for indoor space heaters for working from home

 By Staff, AccuWeather

AccuWeather may receive a commission if you choose to purchase any of the products linked in this article. Prices are accurate at time of publish or update.

On a cold fall or winter day, working from your bed can be far too tempting. One surefire way to get you out of your bed is to invest in a heater to set up near your workspace to keep you warm during your workweek. Even better - it can keep you cozy while you and your loved ones curl up on the couch for the evening.

A reliable and effective space heater can warm up even the draftiest room in your home. With winter approaching, there isn't a better time to invest in one.

And when purchasing a space heater, it's important to keep in mind a few factors. How big is the space you're trying to heat? How important is design to you? How energy efficient is the heater you're looking to purchase?

To help eliminate the guesswork, we've compiled our top picks for a variety of budgets for this fall and winter.

Dyson Pure Hot + Cool Cryptomic (White/Gold)

Dyson Pure Hot + Cool Cryptomic (White/Gold)

Dyson

$749.99

The Dyson Pure Hot+Cool Cryptomic acts as a three-in-one -- not only does it heat and cool your home, but it also uses the new Dyson Cryptomic technology, and the carbon and glass HEPA filter to ensure the air in your home remains free of toxins.

Buy it here

Ceramic 1,500-Watt Portable Electric Fan Tower Heater with Thermostat

Ceramic 1,500-Watt Portable Electric Fan Tower Heater with Thermostat

Lasko

$56.26, $69.99

This Ceramic 1,500-Watt Portable Electric Fan Tower Heater with Thermostat can be adapted for your personal comfort, with two heat settings and an energy-saving auto-off timer. It's perfect for your home office or living space.

Buy it here

Dyson Pure Hot+Cool HP04 purifying heater + fan (Black/Nickel)

Dyson Pure Hot+Cool HP04 purifying heater + fan (Black/Nickel)

Dyson

$669.99

This Dyson Pure Hot+Cool™ HP04 purifying heater and fan automatically detects airborne particles and gases, then diagnoses and reports them in real-time on the Dyson Link app. It also has a long-range heater so it rapidly heats up your room, even those on the larger side.

Buy it here

Phoenix 1,500-Watt Electric Infrared Wall Mounted Heater

Phoenix 1,500-Watt Electric Infrared Wall Mounted Heater

Phoenix

$102.77, was $119.00

This Phoenix 1,500-Watt Electric Infrared Wall-Mounted Heater can easily slide under your desk to keep you warm while working from home. It's also safe to touch, so if you have pets or children, you don't need to worry about injuries.

Buy it here

1,500-Watt Electric Convection Tower Heater

1,500-Watt Electric Convection Tower Heater

NewAir

$101.57

This oil-filled panel heater is an efficient way of heating your home. It's completely silent, and the control panel features a timer for energy savings and safety.

Buy it here

Comfort Zone 1500W Electric Ceramic Oscillating Digital Tower Heater with Remote, Silver

Comfort Zone 1500W Electric Ceramic Oscillating Digital Tower Heater with Remote, Silver

Walmart

$52.96, was $64.99

This affordable and efficient heater helps lower the cost of your heating, with 8 degrees of oscillation, you can set it up in a convenient place that disperses the warm air targeting everyone in the room. There's a safety feature built-in such as the overheat sensor and power indicator light. You can turn the heating up or down using a remote, and even set up the auto shut-off feature which is convenient for cold nights.

Buy it here

Honeywell 360 Degree Surround Heater, HHF360W, White

Honeywell 360 Degree Surround Heater, HHF360W, White

Walmart

$35.96, was $39.97

Honeywell's compact heater comes in two colors, white or black. It disperses heat in 360 degrees, with two heat settings. And if you need to move it out of the way, the cool touch housing and handle means even when it's been on for hours, you won't burn your hand. The super-easy to use thermostat located on the front of the heater makes changing the settings no hassle.

Buy it here

Honeywell UberHeater Ceramic Heater HCE200B, Black

Honeywell UberHeater Ceramic Heater HCE200B, Black

Walmart

$38.72

Whether it's sitting underneath your desk, on top of your bedside table, or in the corner of your living room, the UberHeater Ceramic Heater uses top-over protection that automatically shuts off the heater if it tips. And just like the 360-degree Surround Heater by Honeywell, the UberHeater also has two heat settings, and a cool-to-touch handle so you can move it without burning yourself.

Buy it here

Lasko 1500W Ceramic Space Heater with Adjustable Thermostat, 754200, Silver

Lasko 1500W Ceramic Space Heater with Adjustable Thermostat, 754200, Silver

Walmart

$32.32

Lasko's compact Ceramic Space Heater has a consistent and effective warmth with the 1500W. There are two heat settings, plus a fan-only mode so you cool the room down if it gets too warm. It has a convenient carry handle and a cool touch exterior.

Buy it here

Lasko Oscillating Ultra Slim Electric Tower Space Heater with 2 Speeds, CT14101, Black

Lasko Oscillating Ultra Slim Electric Tower Space Heater with 2 Speeds, CT14101, Black

Walmart

$39.42

Featuring a modern design, the Lasko Oscillating Ultra Slim Electric Tower comes fully assembled, and using ceramic heat, it offers 1500W of warmth. It uses the fan to disperse the heat and oscillates at the simotaniously. Due to the ultra-slim design, it's great for bedrooms or your home study. There's even an Auto Eco control button that automatically maintains the ideal projection of heat using less energy.

Buy it here

More to Consider:

Mystery at 'Skeleton Lake' continues to puzzle and enthrall

 By Monica Danielle, AccuWeather senior producer

Published Jul. 16, 2021 7:23 PM EDT Updated Jul. 19, 2021 1:05 PM EDT











Tucked far up in the freezing, snow-covered mountain ranges of the Himalayas at the dizzying height of more than 15,700 feet above sea level is Roopkund Lake, a small body of water.

At roughly 130 feet (40 meters) in diameter, the lake is less than the width of a football field. But the little lake has a big reputation. It's where the mystery of the dead is still very much alive.

The body of water, commonly known as "Skeleton Lake," is the final resting place for what scientists estimate to be 500 to 800 sets of human remains. It's a mysterious lake where hundreds of people met death and the icy Himalayas continued to preserve their remains.

“If you read about it or try to imagine it, I think that’s when it feels very spooky," journalist Neelima Vallangi told AccuWeather from her home in Kathmandu, Nepal. "That 500 to 800 skeletons are lying abandoned in the mountains deep in the Himalayas. It feeds your imagination."

Frozen Roopkund Lake at sunrise. (Photo credit: Getty Images)

In 1942, an Indian forest official discovered the skeletal remains scattered in and around the lake. He reported the strange discovery, but it wasn't made public until the late 1950s. As National Geographic reported, "In the 1950s, one explorer described the site to an Indian radio station as a 'ghastly scene that made us catch our breath.'"

It was initially believed that the skeletons were Japanese soldiers or Tibetan traders who died due to an epidemic or from exposure to the unforgiving elements.

However, forensic analysis in 2004 revealed unhealed injuries on several skulls that led scientists to conclude that a group of Indian pilgrims, both men and women, assisted by local porters from the region, were struck by giant hail at Roopkund in a single event in the 9th century.

A map showing the location of Roopkund Lake (AccuWeather)

AccuWeather

As Neelima Vallangi wrote for the BBC, "They were believed to have been on a revered, once-in-a-12-year Hindu pilgrimage called Nanda Devi Raj Jat Yatra, an ancient tradition that continues to this day. Roopkund is on the way to Homkund, the final destination of this arduous foot journey."

The theory was plausible at the time. The group comprised both men and women of various ages, which ruled out the possibility that the remains belonged to soldiers.

But from a meteorological perspective, "killer hail" is an unlikely culprit due to the high altitude of Roopkund Lake, AccuWeather Senior International Meteorologist Jim Andrews said.

"At such a high elevation, there seems not to be enough heat or moisture -- both are related through thermodynamics -- to breed "killer" hail," Andrews, who closely observes meteorological conditions in this part of the world, explained.

Andrews didn't completely rule out the possibility given that this is an event that took place more than 1,000 years ago, but generally, the conditions at a location as far above sea level as Roopkund Lake would "limit repeated freeze-thaw, wet-freeze cycles" necessary to produce large hail. He said the conditions there would favor "small and/or soft hail over seriously large, icy hail."

Veena Mushrif-Tripathy, professor of archaeology at Deccan College in Pune, was part of the 2004 investigation. She said no weapons or signs of combat were found at the site, but they did find musical instruments, which is consistent with old folk stories of pilgrims traveling on the Nanda Devi Raj Jat Yatra. The victims were also healthy when they died, which rules out a mass epidemic.

Vallangi completed the trek that leads past Roopkund Lake in September 2009. She told AccuWeather that, at the time, she was excited about hiking so high in the Himalayas.

“You have to be reasonably fit to be able to walk for five to 10 days and the temperature obviously changes, fluctuates from 20 degrees (C) in the plains or lower hills to zero or sub-zero once you reach 4,000, 5,000 meters," she said, referring to a temperature range from about 68 degrees to below freezing. "This lake is at 4,800 meters.”

Vallangi was with a large group when she first set eyes on Skeleton Lake. She said that, before the group arrived, her guide had told them the most popular story behind the human remains: Pilgrims were caught in a huge hailstorm and perished.

This was what those in Neelima Vallangi's group believed they were seeing when they stopped at Skeleton Lake one frigid morning in 2010.

“It was very freezing and it was very cold but once the sun is up it’s like a nice ski day," she said. "It's just that early in the morning when you're walking in the dark that's when it's really cold and miserable."

Neelima Vallangi is a journalist and photographer who went on a trek in the Himalayas that included a stop at Roopkund Lake. (AccuWeather)

The group was on the way to Junargali, a jagged ridge with a panoramic view of the high Himalayas that sits far above the lake.

“We saw some skulls and the leg bones and big arm bones and all these things just piled up,” she told AccuWeather.

“It’s not like you just walk in and there are just skeletons all over. Some of them are in the lake, apparently, and some of them are probably buried in the slopes in the snow, so sometimes when the snow is completely melted you could see them," Vallangi continued. "But when we went, the whole region was completely covered in snow so we couldn’t see any other skeletons scattered around apart from the pile."

A year after Vallangi's trek, the first ancient human genome was sequenced, revolutionizing research into the past. The cold case of Roopkund Lake was heating up. Bone samples from 38 skeletal remains were sent to labs around the world for full genomic analysis. The results of the five-year-long study, published in 2019, were stunning.

The new study revealed that the 38 skeletons belonged to three genetically distinct groups and were deposited at the lake during multiple events over a 1,000-year period.

See also:

The new results show that there were 23 people with South Asian ancestry at Roopkund, but they died during one or several events between the 7th and 10th centuries A.D.

Incredibly, the study revealed, another group of 14 victims died there a thousand years later—most likely during a single event in the 19th century. Furthermore, this group had a genetic ancestry tied to the Mediterranean, specifically Greece and Crete. (There was one sample that had South-East Asian origin, also from the 19th century.) 

“Now we see people died in multiple events between the seventh and tenth century and someone else died in the 18th or 19th century so now we don’t know exactly what happened at all,” Vallangi told AccuWeather.

The discovery of Mediterranean migrants in India is particularly surprising. There is no historical evidence or explanation for who these people were and what they were doing deep in the Himalayas.

The year “1800 is not that long ago. People would remember if something unusual happened." Vallangi said. "I think it would have been passed down in oral history or it must be there in the collective memory of locals because it’s a pretty remote place. So if a foreign-looking group came there and they all perished in the mountains, it seems highly unlikely that nobody would know or remember such a bizarre incident.”

Interestingly, advancements in science have raised more questions than answers. The mystery of what happened at Skeleton Lake doesn't appear any closer to being solved.

“Now that I’ve read all the studies it’s like I’ve put together all of it in my mind and I feel like, 'Wow, this is a crazy mystery!” Vallangi said.

It's a difficult archaeological site due to its remoteness, the extreme weather, and the fact that, over the years, the skeletons have been moved around by trekkers and even taken home as souvenirs. In fact, the trek became so popular the environment began to degrade and the trek past Roopkund Lake is now banned.

More than a decade after that frigid morning when she first stood at the edge of Skeleton Lake, the story continues to grip Vallangi's imagination. But with such little evidence, she wonders whether the world will ever know the truth about what happened there.

“Who are these people? What happened there? Why are they all going there to die in that one lake?" she still wonders. "Yeah, I think it’s a very interesting story ... I don’t know how this will ever be solved.”

More to see:

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