Verkhoyansk Explained

En Name:Verkhoyansk
Ru Name:Верхоянск
Loc Name1:Верхоянскай
Loc Lang1:Yakut
Coordinates:67.55°N 156°W
Map Label Position:right
Image Coa:Coat of Arms of Verkhoyansk (Yakutia) soviet.png
Federal Subject:Sakha Republic
Adm District Jur:Verkhoyansky District
Adm Selsoviet Jur:Verkhoyansk
Adm Selsoviet Type:Town
Adm Ctr Of:Town of Verkhoyansk
Inhabloc Cat:Town
Inhabloc Type:Town under district jurisdiction
Mun District Jur:Verkhoyansky Municipal District
Urban Settlement Jur:Verkhoyansk Urban Settlement
Mun Admctr Of:Verkhoyansk Urban Settlement
Pop 2010Census:1311
Established Date:1638
Current Cat Date:1817
Postal Codes:678530
Dialing Codes:41165
Dialing Codes Ref:[1]
Bodystyle:width:23.5em
Verkhoyansk population
Label1:2010 Census
Data1:1,311
Label2:2002 Census
Data2:1,434
Label3:1989 Census
Data3:1,883
Label4:1979 Census
Data4:1,709

Verkhoyansk (Russian: Верхоянск|p=vʲɪrxɐˈjansk; Yakut: Верхоянскай, Verhoyanskay) is a town in Verkhoyansky District of the Sakha Republic, Russia, located on the Yana River in the Arctic Circle, 92km (57miles) from Batagay, the administrative center of the district, and 675km (419miles) north of Yakutsk, the capital of the Sakha republic. As of the 2010 Census, its population was 1,311. Verkhoyansk holds the record for the hottest temperature ever recorded north of the Arctic Circle, with 38C, and it also holds the record for the coldest temperature ever recorded in Asia, -67.8C. The cold record is shared with Oymyakon.

History

Cossacks founded an ostrog in 1638,[2] 90km (60miles) southwest of the modern town. The ostrog's name "Verkhoyansky", roughly translating from Russian as the town on the Upper Yana, derived from its geographical location on the upper reaches of the Yana River. In 1775, it was moved to the left bank of the Yana River to facilitate tax collection. It was granted town status in 1817. Between the 1860s and 1917, the town was a place of political exile, with some of the more prominent exiles including the Polish writer Wacław Sieroszewski, as well as Bolshevik revolutionaries Ivan Babushkin and Viktor Nogin.

Administrative and municipal status

As an inhabited locality, Verkhoyansk is classified as a town under district level jurisdiction.[3] Within the framework of administrative divisions, it is incorporated within Verkhoyansky District as the Town of Verkhoyansk. As a municipal division, the Town of Verkhoyansk is incorporated within Verkhoyansky Municipal District as Verkhoyansk Urban Settlement.[4]

Economy and infrastructure

There is a river port, an airport, a fur-collecting depot, and the center of a reindeer-raising area.

Geography

Verkhoyansk gives its name to the Verkhoyansk Range, one of the main mountainous zones of the Eastern Siberian System. The town is located close to the northwestern edge of the Yana-Oymyakon Highlands, a cold and sparsely populated area.[5]

Religion

Orthodox Christianity is the most widely professed faith in Verkhoyansk, with a significant non-religious population. Shamanism and Aiyy Faith also have a presence in the town.

Climate

Verkhoyansk sees excessively cold winter temperatures and some of the greatest temperature differences on Earth between summer and winter. Average monthly temperatures range from in January to in July. Mean monthly temperatures are below freezing from October through April and exceed from June through August, with the intervening months of May and September constituting very short transitional seasons. Located within the Arctic Circle, Verkhoyansk has an extreme subarctic climate rather than a tundra climate, dominated much of the year by high pressure. This has the effect of cutting off the region from warming influences in winter and together with a lack of cloud cover leads to extensive heat losses during the cooler months.

Verkhoyansk is one of the places considered the northern Pole of Cold, the other being Oymyakon, located 629 km (391 miles) away by air. The lowest recorded temperature was -67.8C, recorded on January 15, 1885, and both February 5 and 7, 1892.[6] [7] On 6 February 1933 however, the temperature at Oymyakon reached -67.7C, just barely above Verkhoyansk's record.[6] [7] Only Greenland and Antarctica have recorded lower temperatures than Oymyakon or Verkhoyansk: the lowest directly recorded temperature at ground level is, recorded at the Vostok Station in Antarctica on 21 July 1983,[8] [9] and a temperature of was recorded via satellite observations at the East Antarctic Plateau in Antarctica on 10 August 2010.[10] The World Meteorological Organization has recently recognized a temperature of -69.6C measured in Greenland on 22 December 1991 as the lowest in the Northern Hemisphere. The record was measured at an automatic weather station and was uncovered after nearly 30 years.[11]

In this area, temperature inversions consistently form in winter due to the extremely cold and dense air of the Siberian High pooling in deep hollows, so that temperatures increase rather than decrease with higher altitude. In Verkhoyansk it sometimes happens that the average minimum temperatures for January, February, and December are below .

In its short summer, daytime temperatures over are not uncommon. The average annual temperature for Verkhoyansk is . On 20 June 2020 and again in June 2023, Verkhoyansk recorded a temperature of,[12] [13] yielding a temperature range of based on reliable records, which is tied with Oymyakon for being the greatest temperature range in the world. It was also the highest temperature above the Arctic Circle ever recorded. Only a handful of towns in Siberia and Canada have temperature ranges of or more, and Verkhoyansk is the only place on earth with a temperature range of or higher. Verkhoyansk has never recorded a temperature above freezing between November 10 and March 14.[14]

Verkhoyansk has an extreme latitude temperature anomaly when compared with Røst off the coastline of Norway. Both settlements are on 67°N and almost on the same latitudal decimal. In spite of this, Røst is on average more than milder during winter. In summer and particularly during July, on the other hand, Verkhoyansk is significantly warmer than its Norwegian counterpart.

Verkhoyansk has a dry climate with little rainfall or snowfall; the average annual precipitation is 182mm. Although no month can be described as truly wet, there are strong seasonal differences in precipitation, with the summer being much wetter than the winter; yet interestingly, because the driest month (April) is in the "summer" and has less than one-third the precipitation of the wettest "winter" month (October), Verkhoyansk's climate technically qualifies as Köppen Dsd, a classification found only in parts of eastern Siberia. The dryness experienced in winter is largely due to the dominance of high pressure at this time of year.

Finally, Verkhoyansk has very low seasonal lag, with December being colder than February, and June warmer than August. Interestingly, a similar scenario can be encountered in Patagonia in the Southern Hemisphere, where June is the coldest month in many areas.

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Климат Верхоянска - Погода и климат.
  2. Book: Энциклопедия Города России. 2003. Большая Российская Энциклопедия. Moscow. 5-7107-7399-9. 69.
  3. Registry of the Administrative-Territorial Divisions of the Sakha Republic
  4. Law #173-Z #353-III
  5. https://geosfera.org/aziya/russia-aziya/1262-verhoyanskiy-hrebet.html Верхоянский хребет — Россия — Планета Земля (in Russian)
  6. Web site: N. A. Stepanova. On the Lowest Temperatures on Earth.
  7. Weather Underground - The Coldest Places on Earth https://www.wunderground.com/blog/weatherhistorian/the-coldest-places-on-earth
  8. Web site: Global Weather & Climate Extremes. World Meteorological Organization. 23 December 2015.
  9. Web site: World: Lowest Temperature . . 23 December 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100616025722/http://wmo.asu.edu/world-lowest-temperature . 16 June 2010 .
  10. Web site: The Coldest Place in the World. NASA. 12 December 2017.
  11. WMO verifies -69.6°C Greenland temperature as Northern hemisphere record Press Release Number: 23092020; WMO, 23 September 2020.
  12. Web site: A small town in Siberia has likely broken the Arctic high temperature record . Sinclare . Terry . 2020-06-22 . Webcenter11 . Gray Television, Inc . 2020-06-22 .
  13. Web site: Arctic Temperatures Hit Record High in Russia Amid Heat Wave . . 2020-06-22 . The Moscow Times. 2020-06-22 .
  14. Web site: Weather and Climate - Climate Monitor: The weather in Verkhoyansk. www.pogodaiklimat.ru. 25 December 2013. ru. Daily records on the right of the page; December–March records can be accessed via buttons at the bottom of the page.