-80 degrees Fahrenheit..
This species has the warmest fur of its kind..
They also have dense hair on the footpads that help to protect it from the cold..
Real talk
Arctic foxes can survive in temperatures as low as -58 degrees Fahrenheit. About -15 degrees Celsius.
They lived in the Arctic Regions of Canada, the United States (Alaska), and Greenland. The land there is mostly frozen and the temperatures can go down to -40 degrees Fahrenheit in January.
The arctic warm season lasts about 2 months, during the months of July and August, with July being the warmest month. At that, temperatures range between minus 10 degrees and plus 10 degrees Celsius or between 14 and 50 degrees Fahrenheit.
During the winter, The tundra can experience temperatures as low as -60 degrees Fahrenheit. But during the warmer months temperature rises between 32 degrees Fahrenheit and fifty degrees.
Yes, of course! The Arctic tundra can be lower then 0 degrees Celsius (32 degrees Fahrenheit) [which is considerably cold since it is the temperature at which water freezes].
The temperature difference between the Arctic and the Sahara can be as much as 100 degrees or more. In January, the Arctic can reach as much as -50 degrees Fahrenheit while the desert can reach well over 100 degrees.
no it is really really cold so wear clothes like your out in the Arctic
The temperature of the Arctic varies widely because the Arctic is very large. In the summer, some continental locations can exceed 90 degrees Fahrenheit, while also dropping well below zero in the winter. It drops below freezing in all locations during the winter, though it is even warm enough to rain at times in the winter.
The Gobi Desert is the 2nd coldest desert in the world. Located in Asia, the Gobi Desert can reach temperatures of -50 degrees fahrenheit. However the Arctic (which has an average temp of -29 to -34 degrees F) recorded the coldest temperature in an inhabited area at -90 degrees F.
the arctic ocean
The hottest place in North America is in Death Valley, California. There, the temperatures routinely top out at over 100 degrees. The hottest temperature ever recorded in Death Valley was 134 degrees Fahrenheit.
Arctic temperatures are not constantly below freezing, although for many locations it stays very cold. The warmest temperatures above the Arctic Circle are found in northwest Russia and northern Scandinavia (Norway, Sweden, Finland) where summer daytime temperatures above 15°C (59 °F) are not uncommon. Cities above the Arctic Circle include Bodo (Norway) and Murmansk (Russia).