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It sounds
like it should be easy – measure how hot or cold everywhere is, and then
rank them. But how you define a place? Antarctica is surely the coldest
place on Earth but is it all one place? Or many different points? And do you
take the lowest ever temperature or an average over the year? And which
year? There are a lot of questions and, unsurprisingly, it doesn’t make for a
flawless list. But here are ten places you certainly would’t want to be
striding around in swimwear. Shrug on an extra sweater and read our Top
10 Coldest Places on Earth.
Located 5,610m above sea level on the Continental Divide in Montana, this
is one of the warmer places on the list, but the average temperature in
January still fluctuates between 14 and 33F, so never going far above
freezing. It’s like that for the whole winter, with lows at freezing point or
below from October till April. But on the bright side, the summer months
are fairly hot, with a high of 82 in July. So, overall the average mean
temperature for the year is 43.5F, which is relatively high. But that would
be little comfort if you happened to visit in December and you knew it
wasn’t going to warm up till Easter. It’s also the place where the lowest ever
temperature was recorded in the contiguous United States – a bone-chilling
minus 70F on January 20 1954.
6. Oymyakon, Russia
When it comes to cold, Russia is just in another league. Oymyakon has a
record low of -90F, which is the lowest recorded temperature for any
permanently inhabited location on Earth, and it was recorded on February
6th 1933 (the first week of February seems to be a good week for these kind
of records). Of course, the daily temperatures don’t ever go quite that low,
but the average lows for December, January and February are all in the
minus fifties. Even the average for January is still a terrifying -51.5F,
although in July it climbs all the way up to an average of 58.8F. With a
population of 472, the town is quite big compared to some on the list and
its far north location means that it enjoys a 21-hour day in June, although
the December day only lasts 3 hours. Fancy booking a holiday there yet?
. Eureka, Canada
This research base has no permanant inhabitants, but there is a rotation of 8 staff
who work there at any one time. It’s been used as a weather station since its
inception in 1947. It can’t be the most alluring place to work, with no sunlight
from October to February and an annual average temperature of -1.8F. But at least
you wouldn’t get rained on during those long winter months – there is no rain
between October and May, causing the area to be a polar desert. Even so, there’s a
lot of plant life as the temperatures are too low for the moisture in the air to
evaporate. It’s even been described as “The Garden Spot of the Arctic”, with
wildlife such as oxen, foxes and wolves roaming around, and the endless sunshine
of the summer makes it an ideal habitat for nesting birds. A place of great
contrasts.
4. Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
Certainly the most populated place on our list, the capital of Mongolia holds the
dubious honors of being the coldest capital in the world and one of the most
polluted. It’s also quite high up, being 1,310m above sea level, and home to
1,278,000 people. Apparently, it’s a great cultural center, with museums like
the Zanabazar Museum of Fine Arts, which is just as well because you’d hardly
want to linger outside in temperatures of -16F like the ones you’d find there in
January. Across the year, the average temperature is around -2.4F and the climate
is like a subarctic one, thanks to icy winds. But I hear the people are friendly, so
that’s something…
3. Eismitte, Greenland
It’s fair to say that the next few places on the list are largely devoid of museums of
fine art. In fact, Eismitte (literally “Middle of the Ice” in German) is largely devoid
of anything. It was the site of an expedition in the 30s which took temperature
readings of between -85F and 27F and although we don’t have enough information
to accurately gauge what the annual average would be, we can take a guess by
splitting the difference between the average of the warmest month (July, 10F) and
the coldest (February, -53F). That gives us a chilly average of -21.5F, which is
definitely cold enough to get onto the list.
You can’t be too churlish about the lack of information – the figures we do have
came at a horrendous cost. That 1930-1931 mission claimed the lives of Alfred
Wegener and Rasmus Villumsen, while another member of the party had his toes
amputated without anaesthetic. That’s enough reason to never want to go there and
find out more…
Another place about which little is known, North Ice was the subject of a British
expedition in the 1950s, where they successfully recorded the lowest temperature
in North America, beating Snag’s record by 6 degrees (but as Snag is part of
continental North America, it still gets to keep that title). An astounding -87F was
recorded at North Ice on January 9th 1954 and, though it warrants its own page
on tourism sites, it’s unlikely to be a top holiday destination any time soon.
1. Vostok, Antarctica
And of course, the number one spot has to go to Antarctica which, if inhabited and
measured, would probably fill these kind of lists on its own. Vostok is a Russian
weather monitoring station which holds the record for the lowest ever recorded
temperature on Earth – minus 128.6F, on 21st July 1983 – although there are
claims that it dipped to -132F in 1997. The warmest month there is January, with a
mean average of -25.8F, but the mean averages for the winter months are
consistently in the minus 80s. It’s also 3,488m above sea level which means there’s
a distinct lack of oxygen and there’s almost no moisture either. All considered, it is
one of the most dangerous, inhospitable and unpleasant places in the world.
Surprisingly, there are no permanent inhabitants…
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