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coldest temperatures registred:
Moscow, Russia -42° Minsk, Belarus -39° Vilnius, Lithuania -37° Bratislava, Slovalkia -36° Riga, Latvia -34° Tallin, Estonia -34° Kiev, Ukraine -34° Warsaw, Poland -33° Bucharest, Romania -33° Chisinau, Moldova -32° Prague, Czech Republic -27° Budapest, Hungary -24° |
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The coldest temperature recorded in The northern hemisphere was minus 71C in 1926 in the village of Oymyokon,in Russia,which is now part of Europe. It wasn't a true measurement by thermometer,however, but calculated by extrapolation,so it could be wrong by one or two degrees. Minus 60C was recorded on 19th January this year in the same place.. There are candidate cities which are not on the list above. Russia's third largest city,Novosibirsk,in Siberia,has temperatures down to -50C quite frequently through the long winter,for example. Two of my telescopes were made there by the Novosibirsk Optical Institute(TAL).Yakutsk,also in Russia,is reckoned to be the coldest city in the world with temperatures going below -50C most years.
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If you have this info, then yes. But I am farther north then Moscow, Novopolotsk,Belarus. And I remember in 2006 on the 21st of January and actually, for 3 days before that, the temperature was around -40C (-40F) without wind. It was painful to go out. As the first moment you step outside, the areas of the body that were unprotected (face), were covered with ice. Besides, we live in the climate with a lot of moisture that makes cold or hot temperature worth.
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