It's Colder Than Mars Out There
On Thursday morning, Adam Gill stepped outside in a heavy, bright-yellow coat, bulky gloves, and a ski mask to brace himself against the blistering wind. He brought with him a metal teakettle full of boiling water. As he tipped the kettle over, the piping-hot liquid turned instantly into snow and blew away in the wind.
That’s how cold it was at the Mount Washington Observatory in New Hampshire, the highest peak in the northeastern United States. , a meteorologist at the observatory, conducting this little presentation received a bone-chilling low of -34 degrees Fahrenheit (-37 degrees Celsius)—and that was without accounting for wind chill. The day broke the previous record of -31 degrees Fahrenheit (-35 degrees Celsius), set in 1933.
You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
Start your free 30 days