The only animals you'll find at Vostok Station are human animals. Scientists and workers live and work there temporarily to study the health of planet Earth.
The coldest temperature in antarctica was recorded at ther Vostok Station.
Antarctica's Vostok station is the record holder for the coldest temperature on earth. Vostok is a Russian scientific station. Australia claims a pie-shaped slice of Antarctica, which is an invalid claim based on the Antarctic Treaty. Vostok Station -- a Russian research station, is located in this slice of Antarctica.
Yes. The coldest temperatures on earth have been recorded at Vostok Station.
The coldest temperature recorded on earth was recorded in Antarctica, at Vostok Station, which lies farthest from any ocean.
January is one of the warmest months in Antarctica, but South Pole -- USA, and Vostok station -- Russia, may trade coldest temperatures in January.
Good question.Yes it is the coldest place on earth, to be exact vostok station is the coldest place on earth with arecord low of -89.2C.
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.
-65c
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.
The coldest temperature ever recorded at ground level on Earth is −89.2 degrees Celsius or −128.6 degrees Fahrenheit at the Soviet Vostok Station in Antarctica.
No, Vostok Station in Antartica is the coldest place.
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.