Oymyakon
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In Coldest Village On Earth, Eyelashes Freeze, Temperatures Sink To -88F
- Thursday January 18, 2018
- World News | Eli Rosenberg, The Washington Post
Eyelashes freeze, frostbite is a constant danger and cars are usually kept running even when not being used, lest their batteries die in temperatures that average minus-58 degrees Fahrenheit in the winter, according to news reports.
- www.ndtv.com
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Frozen Lashes, Burst Thermometers At The Coldest Inhabited Place On Earth
- Wednesday January 17, 2018
- Offbeat | NDTV News Desk
At Oymyakon in Siberia - one of the coldest permanently inhabited places on earth - temperatures have reached such record-breaking lows that people's eyelashes have frozen and thermometers have broken.
- www.ndtv.com
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It Feels Colder In This Part Of The World Than On Mars
- Saturday December 30, 2017
- World News | Amanda Erickson, The Washington Post
The cold temperatures have wreaked havoc on Canada's infrastructure. It's so cold that electric poles are snapping in Nova Scotia, leaving 158,000 people without power. It's cold enough that ice skating has been canceled, and windows are breaking.
- www.ndtv.com
-
In Coldest Village On Earth, Eyelashes Freeze, Temperatures Sink To -88F
- Thursday January 18, 2018
- World News | Eli Rosenberg, The Washington Post
Eyelashes freeze, frostbite is a constant danger and cars are usually kept running even when not being used, lest their batteries die in temperatures that average minus-58 degrees Fahrenheit in the winter, according to news reports.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Frozen Lashes, Burst Thermometers At The Coldest Inhabited Place On Earth
- Wednesday January 17, 2018
- Offbeat | NDTV News Desk
At Oymyakon in Siberia - one of the coldest permanently inhabited places on earth - temperatures have reached such record-breaking lows that people's eyelashes have frozen and thermometers have broken.
- www.ndtv.com
-
It Feels Colder In This Part Of The World Than On Mars
- Saturday December 30, 2017
- World News | Amanda Erickson, The Washington Post
The cold temperatures have wreaked havoc on Canada's infrastructure. It's so cold that electric poles are snapping in Nova Scotia, leaving 158,000 people without power. It's cold enough that ice skating has been canceled, and windows are breaking.
- www.ndtv.com