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[5] [need quotation to verify] Records indicate 10,251 people died in the Kolyma region prison system in 1938 [6] from various official causes, mainly disease. The CIA's initial 1950's estimate of 3 million victims is stated to be flawed in Martin Bollinger's book on Kolyma prison labor. [7] Norman Polmar's review of that book refers to 130,000 ...
Every day of the year has a record low below freezing, with 9 July having the highest record low at −1.5 °C (29.3 °F). In contrast, 4 January has the lowest record high at −27.9 °C (−18.2 °F). Although winters in Oymyakon are long and extremely cold, summers are mild to warm, sometimes hot, with cool to cold summer nights.
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 ...
This is a list of countries and sovereign states by temperature.. Average yearly temperature is calculated by averaging the minimum and maximum daily temperatures in the country, averaged for the years 1991 – 2020, from World Bank Group, derived from raw gridded climatologies from the Climatic Research Unit.
This is a full 10 degrees colder than the U.S. cold record of -79.8 degrees F at Prospect Creek, Alaska on Jan. 23, 1971. ... zero degrees F between December 1 and March 1! Even Alaska's coldest ...
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)
This is the coldest air the city has experienced since the thermometer dipped to 12 degrees below zero on Jan. 15, 1957 -- an impressive feat given that no snow was on the ground to chill the air ...
Zimna Woda [ˈʑimna ˈvɔda] (German: Zimnawodda) [citation needed] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dźwierzuty, within Szczytno County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. [1]