Las Vegas Review-Journal

Cold spell drops Nordic temperatur­es to minus 40

- By Jari Tanner

HELSINKI — Finland and Sweden recorded their coldest temperatur­es of the winter Tuesday when thermomete­rs plummeted as low as minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit as a cold spell grips the Nordic region.

Cold and snow disrupted transporta­tion throughout the region, including in Norway where a major highway in the south was closed due to the weather and ferry lines suspended operations.

Swedish train operators said the cold snap caused substantia­l problems for rail traffic in the Arctic north.

Nikkaluokt­a, a small village inhabited by indigenous Sami people in northern Sweden, recorded a temperatur­e of minus 42.8 early Tuesday, Swedish public broadcaste­r SVT reported.

“It’s the coldest temperatur­e we have had so far this winter, and it will continue to be quite cold weather in the north,” SVT meteorolog­ist Nils Holmqvist said.

The Swedish Meteorolog­ical and Hydrologic­al Institute reported temperatur­es of minus 22 in several locations in northern Sweden, and issued a warning for snow and wind for central and southern Sweden.

Its second-highest warning applies from midnight into Wednesday.

In neighborin­g Finland, this winter’s cold record was recorded in the northweste­rn town of Ylivieska where temperatur­es fell to minus 36 early Tuesday, and forecaster­s said temperatur­es would be lower than minus 40 in parts of the nation through the week.

Temperatur­es in the Finnish capital, Helsinki, were expected to hover around zero.

Several ferry companies throughout the region canceled crossings, including those from southern Norway to Denmark where a key bridge was closed to vehicles with light trailers because of strong winds, Danish officials said.

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