Russia's Yakutia Plunges to -56°C, Earth's Coldest Inhabited Place

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Moneycontrol•26-12-2025, 16:44
Russia's Yakutia Plunges to -56°C, Earth's Coldest Inhabited Place
- •Russia's far-eastern region, Yakutia, recorded a staggering -56°C, making it Earth's coldest inhabited place.
- •The regional capital, Yakutsk, experienced temperatures between -50°C and -56°C, leading to school closures and warnings for residents to stay indoors.
- •Yakutia's extreme cold is due to its landlocked Siberian basin location, trapping cold air, clear skies, and permafrost.
- •Residents adapt with triple-glazed windows, car engine heaters, and special clothing; scientists study these survival methods.
- •While showcasing nature's power, experts link such extremes to unpredictable climate shifts and warn about melting permafrost.
Why It Matters: Yakutia's -56°C highlights extreme cold, human resilience, and climate change's unpredictable impacts.
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