Que legal, essa cidade fica em que estado?
Achei na Wikipédia: Fica em Sakha (Yakutia)Que legal, essa cidade fica em que estado?
tá bem tá bem vou mudar o título do thread! afinal de contas quem sou eu para discutir a Rússia com um ou com um quase Russo???:lol: M. BucsánszkiHaha. Nada é mais frio que Oymyakon. Dê uma procurada, tinha um vídeo no YouTube. Recorde é só de -71°C.
Oymyakon (Russian: Оймяко́н) is a village (selo) in Oymyakonsky Ulus of the Sakha Republic, Russia, located along the Indigirka River. Population: 800.[citation needed]
Oymyakon is known as one of the candidates for the Northern Pole of Cold, because on January 26, 1926, a temperature of −71.2 °C (−96.2 °F) was recorded there (however, this fact is arguable because the temperature was not directly measured but obtained by extrapolation). This is the lowest recorded temperature for any permanently inhabited location on Earth. It is also the lowest temperature recorded in the Northern hemisphere, except for an unofficial lowest recorded temperature of −77.5 °C (−107.5 °F) at Mount Logan in the Yukon, Canada. Only Antarctica has recorded official lower temperatures with the lowest being −89.2 °C (−128.6 °F) near the Russian station of Vostok.
Its name in the Sakha language means "non-freezing water"; due to the presence of a natural hot spring nearby. The ground there is permanently frozen.
Oymyakon has also been featured in at least two TV series—firstly in the episode The Winter's Tale of the 1996 PBS weather documentary series Savage Skies (USA version narrated by Al Roker, UK version narrated by actor Ian Holm), secondly in Oxford geographer Nick Middleton's television series and accompanying book on people who live in extreme climates discusses his visit to this village, and describes ways in which inhabitants cope with the extreme cold. Middleton describes how Oymyakon lies between two mountain ranges, trapping cold air in between the entire year[1]. Extreme cold temperatures are frequent annually in Oymyakon with temperatures going below −40 °C (−40 °F) regularly, even in 2008 temperatures were observed well below this, −60.2 °C (−76.4 °F) was recorded on the 19th of January.
:yes:
:yes::yes::yes:Nossa, que cidade linda. É nessas horas que a gente tem que agradecer pelo nosso clima, mas realmente como foi dito por uma local, o ser humano se adapta a tudo.
Incrível! legal conhecer!
com o céu azul fica bem agradável (visualmente! hehe)
valeeu!
:lol: É que Oymyakon é realmente o lugar mais frio fora de Vostok, Antártica.tá bem tá bem vou mudar o título do thread! afinal de contas quem sou eu para discutir a Rússia com um ou com um quase Russo???:lol: M. Bucsánszki
Mas essa cidade que vc citou não registra todos os anos temperaturas próximas de -48ºC, portanto Yakutsk é a mais fria SIM.Haha. Nada é mais frio que Oymyakon. Dê uma procurada, tinha um vídeo no YouTube. Recorde é só de -71°C.
Oymyakon (Russian: Оймяко́н) is a village (selo) in Oymyakonsky Ulus of the Sakha Republic, Russia, located along the Indigirka River. Population: 800.[citation needed]
Oymyakon is known as one of the candidates for the Northern Pole of Cold, because on January 26, 1926, a temperature of −71.2 °C (−96.2 °F) was recorded there (however, this fact is arguable because the temperature was not directly measured but obtained by extrapolation). This is the lowest recorded temperature for any permanently inhabited location on Earth. It is also the lowest temperature recorded in the Northern hemisphere, except for an unofficial lowest recorded temperature of −77.5 °C (−107.5 °F) at Mount Logan in the Yukon, Canada. Only Antarctica has recorded official lower temperatures with the lowest being −89.2 °C (−128.6 °F) near the Russian station of Vostok.
Its name in the Sakha language means "non-freezing water"; due to the presence of a natural hot spring nearby. The ground there is permanently frozen.
Oymyakon has also been featured in at least two TV series—firstly in the episode The Winter's Tale of the 1996 PBS weather documentary series Savage Skies (USA version narrated by Al Roker, UK version narrated by actor Ian Holm), secondly in Oxford geographer Nick Middleton's television series and accompanying book on people who live in extreme climates discusses his visit to this village, and describes ways in which inhabitants cope with the extreme cold. Middleton describes how Oymyakon lies between two mountain ranges, trapping cold air in between the entire year[1]. Extreme cold temperatures are frequent annually in Oymyakon with temperatures going below −40 °C (−40 °F) regularly, even in 2008 temperatures were observed well below this, −60.2 °C (−76.4 °F) was recorded on the 19th of January.
:yes: