Whilst it is probable that remote areas of the Australian desert have seen extreme temperatures that have gone unrecorded, the outback Queensland town of Cloncurry originally held the record for the highest known temperature in the shade, at 53.1 °C (127.5 °F) on 16 January 1889. Cloncurry is a small town in northwest Queensland, Australia, about 770km west of Townsville.
The Cloncurry record was later removed from Australian records because it was measured using unsuitable equipment (that is, not in a Stevenson screen, which only became widespread in Australian usage after about 1910). According to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, the current heat record is held by Oodnadatta, South Australia, 50.7 degrees Celsius, occurring on 2 January 1960.
The world heat record for consecutive days goes to Marble Bar in Western Australia, which recorded maximum temperatures equaling or over 37.8°C on 161 consecutive days, between 30 October 1923 and 7 April 1924.
Whilst it is probable that remote areas of the Australian desert have seen extreme temperatures that have gone unrecorded, the outback Queensland town of Cloncurry holds the record for the highest known temperature in the shade, at 53.1 °C (127.5 °F) on 16 January 1889.
The Cloncurry record was later removed from Australian records because it was measured using unsuitable equipment (that is, not in a Stevenson screen, which only became widespread in Australian usage after about 1910). According to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, the current heat record is held by Oodnadatta, South Australia, 50.7 degrees Celsius, occurring on 2 January 1960.
The world heat record for consecutive days goes to Marble Bar in Western Australia, which recorded maximum temperatures equaling or over 37.8°C on 161 consecutive days, between 30 October 1923 and 7 April 1924.
As of February 2013, the lowest officially recorded temperature in Australia was in New South Wales, where it reached minus 23.0 degrees Celsius (-9.4° F) at Charlotte Pass, near Mt Kosciuszko on 29 June 1994.
According to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, the current heat record in Australia is held by Oodnadatta, South Australia, 50.7 degrees Celsius (123.26° F), occurring on 2 January 1960.
According to the Bureau of Meteorology in Australia, the coldest official temperature ever recorded in Australia was minus 23 degrees Celsius at Charlotte Pass, in the Australian Alps. This occurred on 29 June 1994.
Whilst it is probable that remote areas of the Australian desert have seen extreme temperatures that have gone unrecorded, the outback Queensland town of Cloncurry originally held the record for the highest known temperature in the shade, at 53.1 °C (127.5 °F) on 16 January 1889. Cloncurry is a small town in northwest Queensland, Australia, about 770km west of Townsville.
The Cloncurry record was later removed from Australian records because it was measured using unsuitable equipment (that is, not in a Stevenson screen, which only became widespread in Australian usage after about 1910). According to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology, the current heat record is held by Oodnadatta, South Australia, 50.7 degrees Celsius, occurring on 2 January 1960.
The lowest temperature ever recorded in Australia is -23 degrees, recorded in Charlotte Pass, New South Wales on the 28th June 1994.
Oodnadatta, South Australia 50.7 C (123.3 F) on the 2nd January, 1960
It was in Melbourne, at 69-75 degrees Celsius.
-5
two
40
the warmest is a lizard and the coldest is shark!
What is the coldest and the hottest tempture that a tundra can get?????????????????????
you cant really tell the temperature of a star but you tell about hot it is by color. blue being the hottest and red being the coldest.
Planet (in order from sun)Average temperature in KelvinAverage temperature in 'CRanked in order of coldest to hottestMercury*340677Venus7354628 (hottest)Earth287.214.056Mars210-635Jupiter**165-1084Saturn**134-1393Uranus**76-1972Neptune**72-2011 (coldest) *This is the average temperature at the equator. Unlike the other planets Mercury has a huge range in surface temperature due to lack of atmosphere. At the equator, the surface temperature on Mercury can range from 100K (-173'C) to 700K (430'C).**temperature at the 1.0 bar pressure level
hottest temperature was 50.6 °C
40
the warmest is a lizard and the coldest is shark!
neptune
262f
What is the coldest and the hottest tempture that a tundra can get?????????????????????
The hottest temperature is 100.4oF. The coldest temperature is 34.2oF
you cant really tell the temperature of a star but you tell about hot it is by color. blue being the hottest and red being the coldest.
16 degerees c hotest 2 degress c coldest
113 and -22 respectively.
Venus is hottest Mercury is second hottest Earth is third hottest Mars is fourth hottest Jupitar is fourth coldest Saturn is the third coldest Uranus is the second coldest Neptune is the coldest
It depends how far deep it is. The farther down the colder it is