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Zimna Woda (Polish/Russian/Ukrainian for "Cold Water") may refer to the following places in Poland or Ukraine: Zimna Woda, Lviv Oblast (west Ukraine) Zimna Woda, Lower Silesian Voivodeship (south-west Poland) Zimna Woda, Pajęczno County in Łódź Voivodeship (central Poland) Zimna Woda, Zgierz County in Łódź Voivodeship (central Poland)
Satellite measurements of the surface temperature of Antarctica, taken between 1982 and 2013, found a coldest temperature of −93.2 °C (−135.8 °F) on 10 August 2010, at Although this is not comparable to an air temperature, it is believed that the air temperature at this location would have been lower than the official record lowest air ...
Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. move to sidebar hide. Coldest place may refer to: The coldest place on earth ...
Unprecedented bouts of extreme heat and increased ice melting events have become the common topics of global warming worries. But in the South Pole, the opposite effects have been just as jarring ...
The EU legislation obliges Poland to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by 14% compared to 2005 levels. [29] The climate policy of the EU also provides Poland with an annual emission limit; if Poland does not exceed this limit, as has not been done in the years 2013–2020, the surplus emission rights can be used or banked the next year. [29]
Recent years show the atmosphere can deliver the coldest air sooner or later than the average: A bitterly cold outbreak in early March 2019 was the coldest of the season in Great Falls, Montana ...
The station was erected in July 1957 by the Polish Academy of Sciences Expedition within the framework of the International Geophysical Year. The expedition was led by Stanislaw Siedlecki, geologist, explorer and climber, a veteran of Polish Arctic expeditions in the 1930s (including the first traverse of West Spitsbergen island).
Aerial photograph of Vostok Station, the coldest directly observed location on Earth. The location of Vostok Station in Antarctica. The lowest natural temperature ever directly recorded at ground level on Earth is −89.2 °C (−128.6 °F; 184.0 K) at the then-Soviet Vostok Station in Antarctica on 21 July 1983 by ground measurements.