Vostok
The lowest recorded temperature on earth was recorded at the Russian Vostok Station in Antarctica on July 21, 1983.
The coldest natural temperature was −89.2 °C (−128.6 °F) at the Russian Vostok Station in Antarctica on 21 July 1983
No. The coldest place on Earth is Antarctica. A temperature of -89.2 C (-128.6 F) was recorded at the Russian Vostok Station on July 21st 1983.
Antartica - Antarctica is the coldest of Earth's continents. The coldest natural temperature ever recorded on Earth was −89.2 °C (−128.6 °F) at the Russian Vostok Station in Antarctica on 21 July 1983.
-89.6 degrees Celsius, that was recorded in 1983 the station was voltaks station.
The lowest recorded temperatures on Earth occur at remote locations in Siberia and Antarctica, which receive minimal solar heating and little oceanic heat transport. At the Antarctic's Vostok Station (operated by Russia), they reported in the winter of 1997 a low temperature of -91°C (-132°F), which is an unconfirmed world's record. The same station holds the confirmed record, from July 21, 1983, a minimum temperature of -89.2°C (-128.6°F)
Vostok Station, Antarctica, located at the Southern Pole of Cold, had the world's lowest recorded temperature of -89.2 C (-128.6 F) on 21 July 1983.
The three places that have recorded the lowest temperature were all located in Antarctica. The lowest temperature that mankind has ever recorded was in the Russian Vostok Station, in Antarctica. Vostok Station reached a temperature of −89.2 °C (−128.6 °F) in July 21, 1983. The second lowest temperature was recorded in Amundsen-Scott Station, at the South Pole, with a temperature of −82.8 °C (−116.5 °F). The third coldest place is Dome A, in East Antarctica, with a record of −82.5 °C (−116.5 °F)in July 2005. So the 3 coldest places in the world are Vostok Station, Amundsen-Scott Station and Dome A, all three in the Antarctic.
The lowest temperature ever recorded at the surface of the Earth was -89.2 °C (-128.6 °F; 184 K) at the Russian Vostok station in Antarctica on July 21, 1983.
Temperatures on Antarctica can range from a 'tropical' 50 plus degrees F in the most northerly parts of the Antarctic Peninsula, to the coldest temperature recorded on earth, which occurred at the Russian Vostoc Station in July of 1983 and read −128.6 °F.
-89.2 was recorded at the Soviet Vostok Station in Antarctica July 21, 1983.
The highest temperature ever recorded at the South Pole (Amundsen-Scott Station) is −13.6 degrees Celsius on the 27th of December, 1978, and the lowest is −82.8 degrees Celsius on the 23rd of June, 1982. The Australian Antarctic Territory (AAT) experienced the world's lowest temperature when -89.6 degrees Celsius was recorded on 21st July, 1983, at Vostok Station at an elevation of 3488 metres.