Pages

Sunday, 21 June 2020

Temperature record in Siberia

100 degrees Fahrenheit! 

Eastern Siberian town 

shatters record for hottest-

ever temperature inside 

Arctic Circle




RT,
20 June, 2020


The small town of Verkhoyansk, home to 1,000 people in Russia's Yakutia region, broke the record on Saturday for the highest temperature ever recorded within the Arctic Circle, hitting a maximum of 38 degrees Celsius.
Verkhoyansk already held the record for the place with the greatest temperature range on Earth. Prior to today, temperatures in the small town have ranged between -68 and +37 degrees Celsius – a 105-degree difference. In Fahrenheit, that’s between -90 and +98. 


🌡️🔥 T°max de 38.0°C à , orientale (67.55°N), ce 20 juin.
Si cette valeur est correcte, ce serait non seulement un record absolu à la station (37.3°C, 25/07/1988) mais aussi la température la plus élevée jamais observée au nord du cercle polaire !

View image on TwitterView image on Twitter

303 people are talking about this
In July, the average high daily temperature is 19.9 degrees Celsius – much lower than Saturday's sweltering 38.
The record-shattering heat was shared far and wide on social media, most prominently by Swedish climate change activist Greta Thunberg.

Verkhoyansk is 4,700km east of Moscow and is located on the Yana River in Yakutia. The largest region of Russia, Yakutia is home to many different local ethnic groups. In winter, those living in Verkhoyansk often face days of below -50 degrees Celsius.
Traveling from Moscow, a trip to the town would take almost two days, involving multiple flights. In 2014, Business Insider called it "the most miserable place on Earth." 

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.