Tundra
marshlands
A rough guess, would have to be either, central inland Russia (siberia), Northern Canada, or the very northern parts of Norway, Sweden and Finland nearest the Noth Pole....just a guess but a good possibility
The answer is Canada but its not Russia cause then it would be the west
Canada, Russia, the United States, Norway, and Finland are the five most northern countries on the planet. Denmark would be the first if its territory of Greenland were to be included.
The tundra is located in territories and provinces all over the world. The tundra covers an estimated 20 percent of the earth. Alaska, Northern Canada, Russia, Greenland, and Northern Scandinavia are places the tundra can be found.
Canada & Russia. That's two places, the others would probably be northern Sweden, Norway, and Finland. Would the benefit to those places outweigh the pain that is in store for the rest of us?
Northern Canada is extremely remote. The climate is extremely harsh and has long cold winters.
It borders Canada, but is a short way from Russia, you would just need to cross the Bering Strait
If you kept traveling from the eastern tip of Russia, you would come to the Canada or the United States. You could access Canada from the eastern tip of Russia or travel further and head toward Japan.
Russia lies entirely in the northern hemisphere and almost entirely in the eastern hemisphere (it almost touches Alaska in the western hemisphere), so the answer to your question would be that it is more in the northern hemisphere.
In the far northern islands of Canada, or the northern coast of Greenland. However, you would have to look hard, as it is night for 6 months at a time, and they have a pretty low population density across their range.
That would depend on where in Russia. In northern Siberia it does, just like in southern Alaska it doesn't.