Arctic chill at 85F below zero – So cold, Eskimos advised to stay inside!

‘Some of the coldest temperatures that people have ever experienced’

From Churchill polar bears:

Arctic Weather Brrrrreaking Records

Rankin Inlet in a deep freeze of -60C (-76F) a couple of days ago. Susan Enuaraq photo.

Rankin Inlet, Nunavut gets cold in the winter. Located on the northwestern shore of the Hudson Bay at 62 degrees north and between Chesterfield Inlet and Arviat, the town is definitely in a remote yet exposed region. Weather is just a part of life and recently the weather has been colder than cold.

Schools in the south get “snow days” though when you get to the 60-degree latitudes school closures are “cold days”…usually accompanied by some snow as well. When temperatures fall to -60C with the windchill or more than just about everyone will stay home and not risk going outside and expose skin. For the past few days, schools have cautiously remained closed.

“I don’t remember the last time we actually closed due to weather. This is a bit of an extreme,” said Mike Osmond, chair of the Rankin Inlet District Education Authority.

Temperatures are getting to –40 C (-40F) before the windchill and when the winds are factored in, it feels colder than –60 C (-76F).

“You’ve got blustery winds with some of the coldest temperatures that people have ever experienced,” said David Phillips, senior climatologist with Environment Canada, adding that his charts say skin freezes in two minutes at –55 C.(-67F)

Windchill was expected to reach above -65C (-85F) in the past couple of days and we are watching the area closely to see how the community fairs with the dangerous cold.

Blame for the almost 15 degrees colder than normal temperatures is being placed on the polar vortex, a combination of an aggressive weather system and frigid air temperatures.


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Elders in the Arviat and Rankin region are advising native hunters to remain home until the chill breaks. Living on the land in the past didn’t have this luxury as they had to scavenge for food in even the most dangerous conditions. Grocery stores in these communities of nearly 2,500 people now allow for a community to survive the winter and feel secure in the far north. These towns in the remote northern region do pay high prices for this luxury but there is no other way to survive as a flourishing community.

However, now that people can go to the grocery store, they don’t have to risk their lives hunting in extreme temperatures. Replacing cultural traditions, however, can sometimes be hard for natives to the region used to living off the land and some have gotten themselves into risky situations.

December through February is the coldest time of the year in Rankin Inlet and the urge to get outdoors is always there. However, for many just relaxing inside until the treacherous temperatures rise is sometimes a matter of life or death!

 

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goldminor
February 12, 2018 8:35 pm

Cooling surface winds moving towards the Equator in the North and South Atlantic. …https://earth.nullschool.net/#current/wind/surface/level/orthographic=-25.03,-9.27,671

donald penman
February 13, 2018 12:02 am

The test that we need to use to determine if we are starting an ice age (glaciation) or even a mini ice age is not is it cold snowy and icy at sixty degrees latitude north in winter, it is always cold then and it is not even very warm there in spring. The snow and ice has to survive summer and persist through to the next winter at sixty degrees latitude north to cause an albedo effect and we are not seeing that yet.

ren
February 13, 2018 12:42 am

Powerful high in the east of the US with a center over the Great Lakes.
http://pics.tinypic.pl/i/00958/zdfva293rjpj.png
Great Lakes freeze …
http://files.tinypic.pl/i/00958/0d2ydu4tm3bh.png

ren
February 13, 2018 12:48 am

This is a comparison of ice on the Great Lakes in 2016, 2017 and 2018.
https://www.glerl.noaa.gov/res/glcfs/compare_years/

Roger
February 13, 2018 3:38 am

Wind chill is just an excuse for Americans to lie about the temperature and should be abolished.

Reply to  Roger
February 13, 2018 11:09 am

doesn’t ride motorcycles…..

Roger
Reply to  smalliot
February 14, 2018 6:52 am

I do but not in bare skin in winter.

Denys Beauchemin
February 13, 2018 7:42 am

Is there any way we can get the spelling mistakes corrected in the article?
Fairs should be fare.
Than should be then,

Denys Beauchemin
February 13, 2018 7:43 am

And my comma should be a period. 🙂

Roxanne Cook
February 17, 2018 5:04 pm

Could you please EDUCATE yourself if your talking specifically about a group- They are Inuit not Eskimo. The term Eskimo is derogative.

Reply to  Roxanne Cook
February 19, 2018 6:02 pm

No. Not really. Derivation: “via French Esquimaux, possibly from Spanish esquimao, esquimal, from Montagnais ayas̆kimew ‘person who laces a snowshoe,’ probably applied first to the Micmac and later to the Eskimo”.
What do they call us, in their native language? Are you going to forbid it?
I hate political correctness, especially when it imagines hate where no hate exists.

February 19, 2018 5:55 pm

It will be interesting to see if the Northwest Passage is passable this coming summer. That cold just sat in that area for around two weeks. I’ll bet the ice is getting thick.
The NAO is suppose to now plunge, which could bring all that cold south. I don’t want it. It’s nice and mild in New England at the moment, and we could reach sixty (F) tomorrow. But the pattern seems loopy (meridional) world wide, with flips in temperature, and the cold getting far to the south. That bitter cold in in the east of USA in late December and early January made it all the way to Central America, not with freezes, but with cool rains that stunted their banana crop, so we are seeing a banana shortage in our supermarkets now.
https://sunriseswansong.wordpress.com/2018/02/19/arctic-sea-ice-going-bananas/