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What is the most lowest temperature of Earth?

What is the most lowest temperature of Earth?

World: Lowest Temperature

Record Value -89.2°C (-128.6°F)
Formal WMO Review Yes (2011)
Length of Record 1912-present
Instrumentation Maximum/Minimum Thermometer in Standard Stevenson Screen
Geospatial Location Vostok, Antarctica [77°32’S, 106°40’E, elevation: 3420m (11,220ft)]

What is the highest temperature on Earth?

136.4 degrees Fahrenheit
Official world record remains 134°F at Furnace Creek in 1913 In 2013, WMO officially decertified the official all-time hottest temperature in world history, a 136.4 degrees Fahrenheit (58.0°C) reading from Al Azizia, Libya, in 1923.

What was the coldest temperature ever recorded on Earth?

The coldest temperature ever measured was -126 Fahrenheit (-88 Celsius) at Vostok Station in Antarctica. What are the highest and lowest temperatures on Earth? What are the highest and lowest temperatures on Earth? The highest temperature ever recorded on Earth was 136 Fahrenheit (58 Celsius) in the Libyan desert.

Are there more high and low temperatures in the United States?

If the climate were completely stable, one might expect to see highs and lows each accounting for about 50 percent of the records set. Since the 1970s, however, record-setting daily high temperatures have become more common than record lows across the United States (see Figure 5).

Where does the high and low temperature data come from?

The change in the number of days with unusually hot and cold temperatures at individual weather stations (Figures 3 and 4). Changes in record high and low temperatures (Figure 5). The data come from thousands of weather stations across the United States.

What was the temperature of the Earth in the early Solar System?

Collisions between Earth and rocky debris in the early solar system would have kept the surface molten and surface temperatures blistering. Image courtesy NASA . Even after collisions stopped, and the planet had tens of millions of years to cool, surface temperatures were likely more than 400° Fahrenheit.