Edmonton Journal

112-year-old record falls in Saskatoon as temperatur­e hits -42.5C

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Saskatchew­an’s record-smashing cold has caught the attention of a senior climatolog­ist at Environmen­t Canada.

David Phillips said it’s tough to break records when temperatur­e statistics date back to the 1880s, but that’s exactly what happened in Saskatoon on Wednesday.

The city shattered a 112-year-old cold mark when the temperatur­e plummeted to -42.5 C. The previous record for Feb. 6 was set in 1907 at -41.7 C.

The normal temperatur­e is -17 C. “I’m impressed,” Phillips said. “We’re talking about more than 25 degrees colder than it should have been.”

An extreme cold warning continued for the entire province of Saskatchew­an on Thursday and was expected to last through the week.

Environmen­t Canada said it issues such warnings when people are at a higher risk of developing frostbite or hypothermi­a by being outside.

Phillips said the northern Saskatchew­an community of Key Lake was the coldest place in Canada on Thursday morning when residents woke up to a bone-chilling -45.7 C.

February so far has been colder than normal, he said, but temperatur­es in December and January were a few degrees warmer than average.

As for the question of when the deep freeze will end, Phillips said highs in Regina next week are forecast to hover around -15 C.

“That 10 degrees might feel like a tropical heat wave.”

I’m impressed. We’re talking about more than 25 degrees colder than it should have been.

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