Records hold that -81 °F (-63 °C ) was the lowest recorded temperature in North America. It happened in the town of Snag, Yukon, Canada on Feb. 3, 1947. (not) lol i was just kidding dnt really know what it is lol
The coldest temperature in North America is often quoted as -63°C (-81°F) at Snag, Yukon, Canada on 1947-02-03. However, the United States Army Natick Laboratory left a thermometer at an elevation of about 15,000 feet (4,572 meters) on Mount McKinley, Alaska, U.S.A. from 1950 to 1969. The coldest temperature recorded was -100°F (-73°C). This is not only the coldest temperature recorded in North America, but the coldest temperature recorded in the Northern Hemisphere, beating the -67.7°C (-89.9°F) at Oymyakon, Russia on 1933-02-06.
Record Value56.7°C (134°F)Date of Record10/7/1913Length of Record1911-presentInstrumentationRegulation Weather Bureau thermometer shelter using maximum thermometer graduated to 135°FGeospatial LocationFurnace Creek, CA [36°27'N, 116°51'W, elevation: 54.6m (179ft)]
The hottest official temperature in North America and the world is 134�°F (57�°C) at Furnace Creek Ranch (called Greenland Ranch at the time), Death Valley, California, U.S.A. on 1913-07-10. However, that temperature was measured 3.5 feet (1.0668 meters) off the ground. Today, stations in the U.S.A. measure at 4 to 6 feet (1.2192 to 1.8288 meters) off the ground. According to the World Meteorological Organization, temperature should be measured 1.25 to 2 meters (which is approximately 4 feet, 1.2 inches to 6 feet, 6.7 inches) off the ground.
The hottest reliably measured temperature in North America and the world was 129.2�°F (54�°C) at Furnace Creek Ranch, Death Valley, California, U.S.A. on 30 June 2013.
The coldest temperature in North America is often quoted as -63�°C (-81�°F) at Snag, Yukon, Canada on 1947-02-03. However, the United States Army Natick Laboratory left a thermometer at an elevation of about 15,000 feet (4,572 meters) on Mount McKinley, Alaska, U.S.A. from 1950 to 1969. The coldest temperature recorded was -100�°F (-73�°C). This is not only the coldest temperature recorded in North America, but the coldest temperature recorded in the Northern Hemisphere, beating the -67.7�°C (-89.9�°F) at Oymyakon, Russia on 1933-02-06.
Death Valley in California holds the record for the highest temperature in the U.S. at 134° F in 1913.
The hottest temperature ever recorded in N. America was 134* F in Death Valley, CA.
The coldest temperature ever recorded in American history is -79.8°F
Excluding Greenland, the lowest recorded temperature in North America was -81 degrees Fahrenheit.
The north plains of Kenya are the hottest. The highest recorded temperature in Kenya was 107 degrees in the city of Wajir.
The lowest recorded temperature was -48°F in 1887. B. Phillips, Dallas, TX
the highest temperature ever recorded in the shade, occurred in Libya.
According to the Met Office, over Scotland the mean annual air temperature at low altitude ranges from about 7°C on Shetland, in the far north, to 9°C on the coasts of Ayrshire and Dumfries and Galloway in the south-west. Normally temperature decreases by approximately 0.6°C for each 100 metres rise in height so that over the high ground temperatures are generally colder.
There is Snow in the North because The Place is farther from the equator which is the center of the world in which the core is the hottest. The farther away you are from the equator you are. The colder/ more snow you get a year.
The continent that has the hottest recorded temperature is North America. This was on July 10, 1913 where temperatures reached 56.7 degrees Celsius.
"Moin" North germany is reaching 47 degrees celsius
The north plains of Kenya are the hottest. The highest recorded temperature in Kenya was 107 degrees in the city of Wajir.
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.
The hottest air temperature ever reliably recorded in a desert was 134 degrees F in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert in California on July 10, 1913. An even warmer temperature of 136 degrees was recorded a few years later in Libya but that has been discounted as inaccurate as it was not properly measured by untrained Italian soldiers. A recent ground temperature was measured by a satellite in Iran that was even hotter but the ground temperature does not reflect the temperature of the air above it. Anyone who has walked barefoot over an asphalt parking lot in summer can attest to that.So, the answer to your question is that the hottest temperature ever reliably recorded was in the southern part of the North American Continent.
The hottest temperature ever reliably measured in the Desert was 134 degrees F. in the Mojave desert at Death Valley.
In Libya in North Africa. The Temperature was recorded in Al Azizya the record being 136.4F (58C).
the north American desert is the hottest thats my answer hope this help you like it helped me.AnswerThe hottest desert in the World is not the North American Desert, it is in fact the Sahara Desert in Africa. Where the world's hottest temperature of 136 degrees F ( 57.8 C) was recorded.
The continents do not have a consistent ranking in terms of temperature from hottest to coldest as temperature can vary greatly within each continent. However, generally, continents located near the equator such as Africa and South America tend to be hotter, while continents closer to the poles such as Antarctica and parts of Asia tend to be colder.
While the Mojave is the hottest desert in North America, there are hotter deserts. A higher temperature has been recorded on the ground in the Sahara desert in Libya. A very high temperature has been recorded via satellite in the Lut desert in Iran.
The hottest air temperature ever reliably recorded in a desert was 134 degrees F in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert in California on July 10, 1913. An even warmer temperature of 136 degrees was recorded a few years later in Libya but that has been discounted as inaccurate as it was not properly measured by untrained Italian soldiers. A recent ground temperature was measured by a satellite in Iran that was even hotter but the ground temperature does not reflect the temperature of the air above it. Anyone who has walked barefoot over an asphalt parking lot in summer can attest to that.
Argentina has varied climates, from subtropical in the north, to subpolar in the south. The Argentinean Patagonia has very cold winters with heavy snowfall. The hottest and coldest temperature extremes recorded in South America have occurred in Argentina.