The coldest oceans, on average, are the Arctic Ocean and the Southern Ocean, followed by the North Atlantic Ocean and the North Pacific Ocean. The warmest oceans are typically the Indian Ocean and parts of the Western Pacific Ocean near the equator.
18c is the warmest. 12c is the coldest.
To arrange temperatures from coldest to warmest, first identify the numerical values of each temperature. Convert any temperatures that are in different units (Celsius, Fahrenheit, Kelvin) to a common unit for accurate comparison. Once all temperatures are in the same scale, list them in ascending order, starting with the lowest value and progressing to the highest. This will give you the correct sequence from coldest to warmest.
The correct order from coldest to warmest is: ice cap, tundra, subarctic, humid continental. Ice cap regions are the coldest with permanent ice, followed by tundra areas with cold temperatures, subarctic regions with slightly warmer climates, and humid continental areas with more moderate temperatures.
If you are talking in terms of the ocean the smallest is the Indian Ocean. The coldest is the north pole ocean. The warmest is the Indian Ocean. The saltiest is the Atlantic Ocean.
depending on which was the wind is blowing, Pembrey Sands in Carmarthenshire can be both the warmest and coldest place in wales :)
coldest, bogest, and hornest(some type of outfit).
The heat of the planets decrease the further from the sun they are. Mercury being the warmest planet and Neptune being the coldest.
Yes. It is the warmest of the oceans.
The warmst temperature ever recorded was 58 degrees, and the coldest was -89 celsius.
Artic because the Antarctic is not one of the four oceans :)
Because it lies near the tropical waters in all the oceans. Making it the warmest ocean, I think the pacific is the second warmest, Atlantic is the third southern ocean is the fourth and the arctic ocean is the coldest. It is small, and does not have a flow from the north.