By: Payal
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Some of us shiver in mild winters, but in these countries, sub-zero life is the norm. From endless nights to snowbound cities, these are the coldest places on Earth.
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Canada faces freezing Arctic winds and heavy snow. Cities adapt to -30°C with ice hockey rinks, frozen lakes, and streets buried under layers of snow each winter.
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Greenland is almost entirely covered by ice. Winters bring biting winds, icy seas, and skies lit by the northern lights, making it one of Earth's most unforgiving places.
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Finland's winters mean weeks without sunrise. The land is blanketed in snow while reindeer herds and glowing saunas remain a part of daily life despite the extreme cold.
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Norway's winters drop well below zero. Glaciers, icy fjords, and snowbound villages dominate its landscape, shaping daily life through long, harsh, and breathtaking winters.
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In Iceland, snowfall is constant in winter, with some regions covered all year. Hot springs steam in sub-zero air, creating a striking clash of fire and ice.
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Russia is infamous for Siberia, where temperatures can fall below -50°C. Cities like Yakutsk are among the coldest on Earth, with ice fog blanketing daily life.
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Mongolia's winters are brutal, with freezing winds sweeping across its vast steppes. Nomadic herders battle icy nights that drop well below -30°C each year.
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For tips to stay safe on night outs in foreign countries, click here:
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