Extremes on Earth: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|List of extreme geographical points and other geophysical records on Earth|noreplace}} |
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This article describes '''extreme locations on [[Earth]]'''. Entries listed in bold are world records. |
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{{For multi|other lists of extreme places on Earth|Lists of extreme points|more detailed meteorological and climatic records|List of weather records}} |
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{{Use British English|date=November 2022}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2023}} |
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This article lists '''extreme locations on Earth''' that hold geographical records or are otherwise known for their geophysical or meteorological superlatives. All of these locations are Earth-wide extremes; extremes of individual continents or countries are not listed. |
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===Extreme elevations and temperatures per continent=== |
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==Latitude and longitude== |
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<table class="wikitable"> |
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{{See also|List of northernmost items|List of southernmost items}} |
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<tr><th rowspan="2" valign="bottom">Continent</th><th colspan="2" align="center">[[Elevation]] (height above sea level)</th><th colspan="2" align="center">[[Temperature]] (recorded)</th></tr> |
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<tr><th>Highest</th><th>Lowest</th><th>Highest</th><th>Lowest</th></tr> |
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===Northernmost=== |
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<tr><th>[[Africa]]</th><td>[[Image:Kilimanjaro01.jpg|right|100px]]5,895 metres (19,340 feet)<br>[[Kilimanjaro]], [[Tanzania]]</td><td>−156 metres (−512 feet)<br>[[Lake Asal (Djibouti)|Lake Asal]], [[Djibouti]]</td><td>'''57.7 °C (135.9 °F)<br>[[Al 'Aziziyah]], [[Libya]]<br>[[13 September]] [[1922]]'''</td><td>−23.9 °C (−11.0 °F)<br>[[Ifrane]], [[Morocco]]<br>[[11 February]] [[1935]]</td></tr> |
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* The '''[[northernmost point of land]]''' is the northern tip of [[Kaffeklubben Island]], north of [[Greenland]] ({{Coord|83|40|N|29|50|W|type:landmark|name=northernmost point on land}}), which lies slightly north of [[Cape Morris Jesup]], Greenland ({{Coord|83|38|N|32|40|W|type:landmark|name=Cape Morris Jesup}}). Various shifting [[gravel bar]]s lie farther north, the most famous being [[Oodaaq]]. There have been other islands more northern such as [[83-42]] and [[ATOW1996]] but they have not been confirmed as permanent. |
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===Southernmost=== |
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<tr><th rowspan="2">[[North America|America, North]]</th><td rowspan="2">[[Image:Denali_Mt_McKinley.jpg|right|100px]]6,194 metres (20,320 feet)<br>[[Mount McKinley]] (Denali), [[Alaska]], [[U.S.A.]]</td><td rowspan="2">−86 metres (−282 feet)<br>[[Death Valley]], [[California]], [[U.S.A.]]</td><td rowspan="2">56.7 °C (134.0 °F)<br>[[Death Valley]], [[California]], [[U.S.A.]]<br>[[10 July]] [[1913]]</td><td>−63.0 °C (−81.4 °F)<br>[[Snag, Yukon|Snag]], [[Yukon]], [[Canada]]<br>[[3 February]] [[1947]]</td></tr> |
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* The '''southernmost continental point of land outside Antarctica''' is in South America at [[Cape Froward]], [[Magallanes Region]], [[Chile]] ({{Coord|53|56|00|S|071|20|00|W|display=inline}}). |
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<tr><td>−66 °C (−87 °F)<br>[[Northice]], [[Greenland]]<br>[[9 January]] [[1954]]</td></tr> |
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* The '''southernmost point of (liquid) water''' is a bay on the [[Filchner–Ronne Ice Shelf]] along the coast of Antarctica ({{Coord|83|S|59|W}}){{Citation needed|date=January 2020}}, about {{cvt|100|km|mi|sigfig=1}} south of [[Berkner Island]]. |
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** The '''southernmost point of ocean''' is located on the [[Gould Coast]] ({{Coord|84|30|S|150|0|W|type:landmark|name=southernmost point of ocean}}).{{Citation needed|date=January 2020}}<ref>[http://geonames.usgs.gov/apex/f?p=gnispq:5:0::NO::P5_ANTAR_ID:5881 Gould Coast] US Geographic Survey.</ref> |
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** The '''southernmost point of [[open ocean]]''' is in the [[Bay of Whales]], also part of the [[Ross Sea]], at 78°30'S, at the edge of the [[Ross Ice Shelf]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Bay-of-Whales|title=Bay of Whales - former bay, Antarctica|publisher=[[Encyclopædia Britannica]]|website=[[Encyclopædia Britannica Online]]}}</ref> |
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*** The '''southernmost island''' is considered to be [[Deverall Island]], near the [[Shackleton Coast]], surrounded by the Ross Ice Shelf although there is an island in [[Lake Vostok]] but it is currently under ice.<ref>{{cite news |first=D |last=Whitehouse |title=Russia to resume Vostok drilling |date=25 May 2005 |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4577627.stm |work=BBC News |access-date=28 January 2011 }}</ref> |
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===Easternmost and westernmost=== |
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<tr><th>[[South America|America, South]]</th><td>[[Image:Aconcagua - Argentina - January 2005 - by Sergio Schmiegelow.jpg|right|100px]]6,962 metres (22,841 feet)<br>[[Aconcagua]], [[Mendoza Province|Mendoza]], [[Argentina]]</td><td>−105 metres (−344 feet)<br>[[Laguna del Carbón]], [[Argentina]]</td><td>48.9 °C (120.0 °F)<br>[[Rivadavia]], [[Argentina]]<br>[[11 December]] [[1905]]</td><td>−33.0 °C (−27.4 °F)<br>[[Sarmiento, Chubut|Sarmiento]], [[Argentina]]<br>[[1 June]] [[1907]]</td></tr> |
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* The '''easternmost and westernmost points on Earth''', based on the east–west standard for describing [[longitude]], can be found anywhere along the [[180th meridian]], which passes through the [[Arctic Ocean|Arctic]], [[Pacific Ocean|Pacific]], and [[Southern Ocean]]s, as well as parts of [[Siberia]] (including [[Wrangel Island]]), Antarctica, and three islands of [[Fiji]] ([[Vanua Levu]]'s eastern peninsula, the middle of [[Taveuni]], and the western part of [[Rabi Island]]). |
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** Using instead the path of the [[International Date Line]] (which is not a straight line), the '''westernmost point on land''' is [[Attu Island]], [[Alaska]], and the '''easternmost point on land''' is [[Caroline Island]], [[Kiribati]].{{efn|[http://www.trussel.com/kir/dateline.htm A 1995 realignment of the International Date Line] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060628045504/http://trussel.com/kir/dateline.htm |date=28 June 2006}} moved all of Kiribati to the Asian side of the Date Line, causing Caroline Island to be the easternmost point. If the previous Date Line were followed, the easternmost point would be Tafahi Niuatoputapu, in the [[Tonga Islands]].}} |
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===Longest grid lines=== |
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<tr><th>[[Antarctica]]</th><td>[[Image:Vinson Massif from space.jpg|right|100px]]4,892 metres (16,050 feet)<br>[[Vinson Massif]]</td><td>'''−2,555 meters (−8,383 feet)<br>[[Bentley Subglacial Trench]]''' (under ice)</td><td>14.6 °C (58.3 °F)<br>[[Vanda Station]]<br>[[5 January]] [[1974]]</td><td>'''−89.2 °C (−128.6 °F)<br>[[Vostok, Antarctica|Vostok]]<br>[[21 July]] [[1983]]'''</td></tr> |
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{{multiple issues|section=yes| |
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{{unreferenced section|date=August 2012}} |
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{{original research|section|date=May 2019}} |
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}} |
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====Along constant latitude==== |
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<tr><th rowspan="2">[[Asia]]</th><td rowspan="2">[[Image:Sagarmatha ck Oct18 2002.jpg|right|100px]]'''8,848 metres (29,028 feet)<br>[[Mount Everest]], [[Nepal]] - [[Tibet]], [[China]]''' <sup>[A]</sup>'''</td><td rowspan="2">−418 metres (−1,371 feet)<br>[[Dead Sea]] shore, [[Israel]] - [[Jordan]]'''</td><td rowspan="2">53.9 °C (129.0 °F)<br>[[Tirat Tzvi]], [[Israel]]<br>[[21 June]] [[1942]]</td><td>−67.8 °C (−90.0 °F)<small> Measured</small><br>[[Verkhoyansk]], [[Siberia]], [[Russia]]<br>[[7 February]] [[1892]] <ref>[http://www.bbc.co.uk/weather/world/city_guides/results.shtml?tt=TT004630 Average conditions for Verkhoyansk from the BBC]</ref></td></tr> |
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* The '''longest continuous east–west distance on land''' is {{cvt|10726|km}} along the latitude 48°24'53"N, from the west coast of France ([[Pointe de Corsen]], {{Coord|48|24|53|N|4|47|44|W}}) through [[Central Europe]], [[Ukraine]], [[Russia]], [[Kazakhstan]], [[Mongolia]] and [[China]], to a point on the east coast of Russia ({{Coord|48|24|53|N|140|6|3|E}}). |
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<tr><td>−71.2 °C (−96.16 °F)<small> Extrapolated</small><br>[[Oymyakon]], [[Siberia]], [[Russia]]<br>[[26 January]] [[1926]] <ref>[http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/05/0512_040512_tvoymyakon.html Life Is a Chilling Challenge in Subzero Siberia from the National Geographic]</ref></td></tr> |
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* The '''longest continuous east–west distance at sea''' is {{cvt|22471|km}} along the latitude 55°59'S, south of [[Cape Horn]], [[South America]]. |
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** The '''longest continuous east–west distance at sea between two continents''' is {{cvt|15409|km}} along the latitude 18°39'12"N, from the coast of [[Hainan]], China ({{Coord|18|39|12|N|110|15|9|E}}) across the [[Pacific Ocean]] to the coast of [[Michoacán]], [[Mexico]] ({{Coord|18|39|12|N|103|42|6|W}}). |
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====Along constant longitude==== |
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<tr><th>[[Australia]]</th><td>[[Image:P1010300.JPG|right|100px]] 2,228 metres (7,310 feet)<br>[[Mount Kosciuszko]], [[New South Wales]]</td><td>−15 metres (−49 feet)<br>[[Lake Eyre]], [[South Australia]]</td><td>53.1 °C (128.0 °F)<br>[[Cloncurry, Queensland]]<br>[[16 January]] [[1889]] <sup>[B]</sup></td><td>−23.0 °C (−10.4 °F)<br>[[Charlotte Pass, New South Wales]]<br>[[29 June]] [[1994]]</td></tr> |
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* The '''longest continuous north–south distance on land''' is {{cvt|7590|km}} along the meridian 99°1'30"E, from the northern tip of Siberia in the Russian Federation ({{Coord|76|13|6|N|99|1|30|E}}), through Mongolia, China, and [[Myanmar]], to a point on the south coast of [[Thailand]] ({{Coord|7|53|24|N|99|1|30|E}}). |
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** The longest in Africa is {{cvt|7417|km}} along the meridian 20°12'E, from the north coast of [[Libya]] ({{Coord|32|19|0|N|20|12|0|E}}), through [[Chad]], [[Central African Republic]], [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]], [[Angola]], [[Namibia]], and [[Botswana]], to the south coast of [[South Africa]] ({{Coord|34|41|30|S|20|12|0|E}}). |
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** The longest in South America is the length {{cvt|7098|km}} along the meridian 70°2'W, from the north coast of [[Venezuela]] ({{Coord|11|30|30|N|70|2|0|W}}), through [[Colombia]], [[Ecuador]], [[Peru]], and [[Chile]], to the southern tip of [[Argentina]] ({{Coord|52|33|30|S|70|2|0|W}}). |
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** The longest in North America is {{cvt|5813|km}} along the meridian 97°52'30"W, from northern [[Canada]] ({{Coord|68|21|0|N|97|52|30|W}}), through the [[United States]], to southern Mexico ({{Coord|16|1|0|N|97|52|30|W}}). |
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* The '''longest continuous north–south distance at sea''' is {{cvt|15986|km}} along the meridian 34°45'45"W, from the coast of Eastern Greenland ({{Coord|66|23|45|N|34|45|45|W}}) across the [[Atlantic Ocean]] to the [[Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf]], on the coast of Antarctica ({{Coord|77|37|0|S|34|45|45|W}}). The longest in the Pacific Ocean is {{cvt|15883|km}} along the meridian 172°8'30"W, from the coast of Siberia ({{Coord|64|45|0|N|172|8|30|W}}) to the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica ({{Coord|78|20|0|S|172|8|30|W}}). |
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* The '''meridian that crosses the greatest total distance on land''' (disregarding intervening bodies of water) is still to be determined. It is likely located in the vicinity of 22°E, which is the longest integer meridian that fits that criterion, crossing a total of {{cvt|13035|km}} of land through Europe ({{cvt|3370|km|disp=or}}), Africa ({{cvt|7458|km|disp=or}}), and Antarctica ({{cvt|2207|km|disp=or}}).{{efn|By comparison, the meridian that passes through the [[Great Pyramid of Giza]] in Egypt (31°08'3.69"E) is {{cvt|855|km}} shorter.}} More than 65% of this meridian's length is located on land. The next six longest integer meridians by total distance over land are, in order: |
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** 23°E: {{cvt|12953|km}} through Europe ({{cvt|3325|km|disp=or}}), Africa ({{cvt|7415|km|disp=or}}), and Antarctica ({{cvt|2214|km|disp=or}}) |
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** 27°E: {{cvt|12943|km}} through Europe ({{cvt|3254|km|disp=or}}), Asia ({{cvt|246|km|disp=or}}), Africa ({{cvt|7223|km|disp=or}}), and Antarctica ({{cvt|2221|km|disp=or}}) |
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** 25°E: {{cvt|12875|km}} through Europe ({{cvt|3344|km|disp=or}}), Africa ({{cvt|7327|km|disp=or}}), and Antarctica ({{cvt|2204|km|disp=or}}) |
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** 26°E: {{cvt|12858|km}} through Europe ({{cvt|3404|km|disp=or}}), Africa ({{cvt|7258|km|disp=or}}), and Antarctica ({{cvt|2196|km|disp=or}}) |
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** 24°E: {{cvt|12794|km}} through Europe ({{cvt|3263|km|disp=or}}), Africa ({{cvt|7346|km|disp=or}}), and Antarctica ({{cvt|2185|km|disp=or}}) |
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** 28°E: {{cvt|12778|km}} through Europe ({{cvt|3039|km|disp=or}}), Asia ({{cvt|388|km|disp=or}}), and Africa ({{cvt|7117|km|disp=or}}) |
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====Along any geodesic==== |
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<tr><th>[[Europe]]</th><td>[[Image:Albours.jpg|right|100px]]5,642 metres (18,506 feet)<br>[[Mount Elbrus]], [[Russia]]</td><td>−28 metres (−92 feet)<br>[[Caspian Sea]] shore, [[Russia]]</td><td>50.0 °C (122.0 °F)<br>[[Seville]], [[Sevilla (province)]], [[Spain]]<br>[[4 August]] [[1881]]</td><td>−55.0 °C (−67.0 °F)<br>[[Ust-Shchugor]], [[Russia]]<br>January (no exact date available)</td></tr> |
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These are the longest [[geodesic|straight lines]]{{efn|A geodesic is defined as the shortest route between any two points on the surface of the Earth, as measured along the surface of the Earth (rather than through the Earth's interior); they are "straight lines" only in the sense that they are plotted on an idealized two-dimensional surface of the three-dimensional Earth, neglecting changes in surface elevation. On an idealized spherical model of the Earth, geodesics are equivalent to [[great-circle distance]]s measured along the arcs of [[great circle]]s.}} that can be drawn between any two points on the surface of the Earth and remain exclusively over land or water; the points need not lie on the same line of latitude or longitude. |
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* The '''longest continuous straight-line ([[great circle]]) path over land''' is {{cvt|13588|km}} long and spans between the West African coast near [[Greenville, Liberia|Greenville]], [[Liberia]] ({{Coord|5|2|51.59|N|9|7|23.26|W}}) and a peninsula about {{cvt|100|km|mi|sigfig=1}} northeast of [[Wenzhou]], China ({{Coord|28|17|7.68|N|121|38|17.31|E}}), passing over the [[Suez Canal]].<ref>[http://www.gcmap.com/mapui?P=5%B02%26%238242%3B51.59%26%238243%3BN+9%B07%26%238242%3B23.26%26%238243%3BW+-+28%B017%26%238242%3B7.68%26%238243%3BN+121%B038%26%238242%3B17.31%26%238243%3BE%0D%0A&MS=bm&DU=mi (Map from gcmap)]</ref> |
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** The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental [[Africa]] is {{cvt|8,402|km}}, along a line that begins just east of [[Tangier]], [[Morocco]], and ends {{cvt|100|km|mi|sigfig=1}} east of [[Port Elizabeth]], [[South Africa]]. This line passes through Morocco, [[Algeria]], [[Mali]], [[Niger]], [[Nigeria]], [[Cameroon]], [[Equatorial Guinea]], [[Gabon]], [[Republic of the Congo]], [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]], [[Angola]], [[Namibia]], [[Botswana]], and South Africa.{{citation needed|date=June 2019}} |
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** The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental [[Asia]] is {{cvt|10,152|km}}, along a line that begins on the [[India]]n coast near [[Kanyakumari]] and ends at the [[Bering Sea]] coast of the [[Chukchi Peninsula]] in [[Russia]]. This line passes through India, [[Nepal]], [[China]], [[Mongolia]], and Russia.{{citation needed|date=June 2019}} |
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** The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental [[Europe]] (defining the [[Ural Mountains]] as the border between Europe and Asia) is {{cvt|5,325|km}}, along a line that begins at [[Cape St. Vincent]], [[Portugal]], and ends at the Urals, near the town of [[Perm, Russia]]. This line passes through Portugal, [[Spain]], [[France]], [[Germany]], [[Poland]], [[Lithuania]], [[Belarus]], and Russia.{{citation needed|date=June 2019}} |
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** The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental [[North America]] is {{cvt|7,602|km}}, along a line that begins at [[Point Hope, Alaska]], [[United States]], and ends {{cvt|34|km}} southwest of the town of [[Salina Cruz]], [[Mexico]]. This line passes through [[Alaska]], [[Canada]], [[Contiguous United States|the contiguous United States]], and Mexico.{{citation needed|date=June 2019}} |
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** The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental [[South America]] is {{cvt|7,248|km}}, along a line that begins {{cvt|10|km}} northeast of [[Puerto Cumarebo]], [[Venezuela]], and ends {{cvt|80|km}} south of the town of [[Punta Arenas]], [[Chile]]. This line passes through Venezuela, [[Colombia]], [[Brazil]], [[Peru]], Chile, and [[Argentina]].{{citation needed|date=June 2019}} |
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** The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental [[Australia (continent)|Australia]] is {{cvt|4,053|km}}, along a line that begins at the southern end of [[Cape Range National Park]] in [[Western Australia]] and ends at the town of [[Byron Bay]] in [[New South Wales]].{{citation needed|date=June 2019}} |
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* There are several possible candidates for the '''longest continuous straight-line distance in any direction at sea''', as there are many possible ways to travel along a great circle for more than the [[antipodes|antipodic]] length of {{cvt|19840|km}}. Some examples of such routes would be: |
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** From the south coast of [[Balochistan, Pakistan|Balochistan]] province somewhere near Port of [[Karachi, Pakistan|Karachi]], [[Pakistan]] ({{Coord|25|25|N|66|25|E}}) across the [[Arabian Sea]], southwest through the Indian Ocean, near [[Comoros]], passing Namaete Canyon, near the South African coast, across the South Atlantic Ocean, then west across [[Cape Horn]], then northwest across the Pacific Ocean, near [[Easter Island]], passing the [[Antipodes|antipodal point]] near [[Emlilia]] island, through the South [[Bering Sea]] and ending somewhere on the northeast coast of [[Kamchatka]], near [[Ossora]] ({{Coord|59 |38 |N|163|24|E}}). This route is {{cvt|32040|km}} long.<ref>[http://www.gcmap.com/mapui?P=25%B025%27N+66%B025%27E+-+59%B038%27S+16%B036%27W+-+25%B025%27S+113%B035%27W+-+59%B038%27N+163%B024%27E%0D%0A (Map from gcmap)]</ref> This route was confirmed to be the longest (at about {{cvt|32090|km|mi|disp=or}}) given map data at a {{cvt|1.8|km|mi}} level of resolution.<ref name="ChabukswarMukherjee">{{cite arXiv| last1 = Chabukswar | first1 = Rohan| last2 = Mukherjee| first2 = Kushal| title = Longest Straight Line Paths on Water or Land on the Earth| date = 9 April 2018|class= math.HO| eprint=1804.07389}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= https://www.science.org/content/article/ocean-path-will-take-you-longest-straight-line-journey-earth |title=This ocean path will take you on the longest straight-line journey on Earth|author=David Shultz |date= 30 April 2018|publisher=Science Magazine}}</ref>{{efn|The "longest continuous straight-line distance in any direction at sea" from Karachi to Kamchatka was [[Special:Contributions/Muh1974 |originally added to Wikipedia by user Muh1974 on 21 January 2010]] and then confirmed by Chabukswar and Mukherjee in 2018.<ref name="ChabukswarMukherjee"/> The source of this discovery before 2010 is unknown {{as of|2022 |8 |lc= y}}.}} |
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** From the south coast of [[Hormozgan]] province, [[Iran]] ({{Coord|25|35|N|58|22|E}}) across the [[Gulf of Oman]], southeast across the Arabian Sea, passing south of [[Australia]] and [[New Zealand]], near the Antarctic coast, then northeast across the South Pacific Ocean, passing the [[Antipodes|antipodal point]] and ending on the southwest coast of [[Mexico]] somewhere near [[Ciudad Lázaro Cárdenas]] ({{Coord|17|57|N|101|57|W}}). This route is {{cvt|25267|km}} long.<ref>[http://www.gcmap.com/mapui?P=25%B035%27N+58%B022%27E+-+17%B057%27S+78%B003%27E+-+25%B035%27S+121%B038%27W+-+17%B057%27N+101%B057%27W (Map from gcmap)]</ref> |
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** From [[Invercargill]], New Zealand ({{Coord|46|37|S|168|59|E}}) across [[Cape Horn]], then off the coast of [[Brazil]] close to [[Recife]], passing north of [[Cape Verde]], passing the [[antipodes|antipodal point]] and ending somewhere on the southwest coast of [[Ireland]] ({{Coord|52|09|N|6|34|W}}). This route is {{cvt|20701|km}} long.<ref>[http://www.gcmap.com/mapui?P=46%B037%27S+168%B059%27E+-+52%B009%27S+173%B026%27E+-+46%B037%27N+11%B001%27W+-+52%B009%27N+6%B034%27W%0D%0A (Map from gcmap)]</ref> |
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====Along any diameter (straight line passing through the centre of the Earth)==== |
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<tr><th>[[Oceania]]</th><td>[[Image:Puncak Jaya icecap 1972.jpg|right|100px]]4,884 metres (16,023 feet)<br>[[Carstensz Pyramid]] (Puncak Jaya), [[New Guinea]]</td><td>[[Sea level]]</td><td>42.4 °C (108.3 °F)<br>[[Awatere River|Awatere Valley]] and [[Rangiora, New Zealand|Rangiora]], [[New Zealand]]<br>[[7 February]] [[1973]]</td><td>−21.6 °C (−6.9 °F)<br>[[Ophir, New Zealand|Ophir]], [[New Zealand]]<br>[[3 July]] [[1995]]</td></tr> |
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As distinct from geodesic lines, which appear straight only when projected onto the spheroidal surface of the Earth (i.e. arcs of great circles), [[Line (geometry)|straight lines]] passing through the Earth's centre can be constructed through the interior of the Earth between almost any two points on the surface of the Earth (some extreme topographical situations such as overhanging cliffs being the rare exceptions{{cn|date=August 2022}}). A line projected from the summit of [[Cayambe (volcano)|Cayambe]] in [[Ecuador]] (see [[#Highest_points|highest points]]) through the axial centre of the Earth to its [[antipodes|antipode]] on the island of [[Sumatra]] results in the longest [[diameter]] that can be produced anywhere through the Earth. As the variable circumference of the Earth approaches {{convert|25000|mi|order=flip}}, such a maximum "diameter" or "antipodal" line would be on the order of {{convert|8000|mi|order=flip}} long.{{cn|date=August 2022}} |
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==Elevation== |
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<tr><td colspan="5" align="center">'''Bold''' entries are Earth-wide extremes.</td></tr> |
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{{See also|Lists of highest points|List of elevation extremes by region|List of elevation extremes by country}} |
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<tr><td colspan="5" align="center"> |
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'''[A]''': Height above sea level is the usual choice of definition for elevation. In terms of the point farthest away from the centre of the Earth, [[Chimborazo]] in [[Ecuador]] (6,267 m) can be considered the planet's most extreme high point. This is due to the Earth's [[oblate spheroid]] shape, with points near the Equator being farther out from the centre than those at the poles.<br> |
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'''[B]''': The temperature of 53.1 °C (128.0 °F) was recorded under non-standard exposure conditions and is therefore not considered official. The highest temperature in Australia recorded under standard exposure conditions is 50.7 °C (123.3 °F) on [[2 January]] [[1960]] in [[Oodnadatta, South Australia]]. [http://www.abc.net.au/am/content/2003/s1015670.htm Transcript of report on the highest temperature]</td> </tr> </table> |
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=== |
===Highest points=== |
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{{comparison_of_Earth_farthest_points.svg}} |
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<table class="wikitable"> |
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[[File:Volcán Chimborazo, "El Taita Chimborazo".jpg|thumb|The summit of [[Chimborazo]] in [[Ecuador]] is the farthest point from Earth's centre.]] |
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<tr><th>Greatest purely vertical drop</th><td>[[Image:Mount_Thor_Peak_1997-08-07.jpg|right|100px]]1,250 metres (4,100 feet)<br>[[Mount Thor]], [[Auyuittuq National Park]], [[Baffin Island]], [[Nunavut]], [[Canada]]</td></tr> |
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* The '''highest point on Earth's surface''' measured from [[sea level]] is the summit of [[Mount Everest]], on the border of [[Nepal]] and [[China]]. While [[Mount Everest#Surveys|measurements of its height]] vary slightly, the elevation of its peak was most recently established in 2020 by the Nepali and Chinese authorities as {{cvt|8848.86|m|ft|1}} above sea level.<ref>{{cite web |url= https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2020/12/new-height-of-mount-everest-announced-by-china-and-nepal/|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20201208113343/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2020/12/new-height-of-mount-everest-announced-by-china-and-nepal/|url-status= dead|archive-date= 8 December 2020|title= Mount Everest is more than two feet taller, China and Nepal announce|work=nationalgeographib.com|date= 9 February 2021}}</ref> The summit was first reached probably by Sir [[Edmund Hillary]] of [[New Zealand]] and [[Tenzing Norgay]] Sherpa of Nepal in 1953. |
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<tr><th>Greatest nearly vertical drop</th><td>[[Image:Trango_Towers_Pakistan.jpg|right|100px]]1,340 metres (4,400 ft)<br>[[Great Trango Tower]], [[Pakistan]] (summit elevation 6,286 metres/20,608 feet)</td></tr> |
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* The '''point farthest from Earth's centre''' is the summit of [[Chimborazo]]<ref>{{cite web |url=http://geology.com/records/highest-mountain-in-the-world.shtml |title=Highest Mountain in the World |work=geology.com}}</ref> in [[Ecuador]], at {{cvt|6384.4|km|mi|1}} from Earth's centre; the peak's elevation relative to sea level is {{cvt|6263.47|m|ft|0}}.{{efn|The elevation given here was established by a [[GPS]] survey in February 2016. The survey was carried out by a team from the [[Institut de recherche pour le développement|French Research Institute for Development]], working in cooperation with the [[Ecuador]]ian Military Geographic Institute.<ref>{{cite web |title=Chimborazo, el volcán de Ecuador más alto que el Everest (si se mide desde el centro de la Tierra) |publisher=[[BBC Mundo]] |date=7 April 2016 |url=http://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias/2016/04/160407_por_que_chimborazo_ecuador_mas_lejos_centro_tierra_que_el_everest_dgm |access-date=8 April 2016}}</ref>}} Because Earth is an [[flattening|oblate]] [[spheroid]] rather than a perfect [[spherical Earth|sphere]], it is [[equatorial bulge|wider]] at the [[equator]] and narrower toward each [[geographical pole|pole]]. Therefore, the summit of Chimborazo, which is near the Equator, is farther away from Earth's centre than the summit of Mount Everest is; the latter is {{cvt|2168|m|ft|1}} closer, at {{cvt|6382.3|km|mi|1}} from Earth's centre. [[Peru]]'s [[Huascarán]] (at {{cvt|6384.4|m|ft|0|disp=or}}) contends closely with Chimborazo, though the former is a mere {{cvt|10|m|ft|}} closer to the Earth's centre. |
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</table> |
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* The '''fastest point on Earth''' or, in other words, '''the point farthest from Earth's rotational axis''' is the summit of [[Cayambe (volcano)|Cayambe]]<ref>{{cite web |last1=Klenke |first1=Paul |title=Distance to the Center of the Earth |url=https://www.summitpost.org/distance-to-the-center-of-the-earth/849764 |website=Summit Post |access-date=4 July 2018}}</ref> in Ecuador, which rotates around Earth's axis at a speed of {{cvt|1675.89|km/h|mph|}} and is {{cvt|6383.95|km|mi|}} from the axis. Like Chimborazo, which is the fourth-fastest peak at {{cvt|1675.47|km/h|mph|}}, Cayambe is close to the Equator and takes advantage of the oblate spheroid [[figure of Earth]]. More important, however, Cayambe's proximity to the Equator means that the majority of its distance from the Earth's centre contributes to Cayambe's distance from the Earth's axis. |
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====Highest geographical features==== |
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''See also [[List of mountains]] and [[Seven Summits]].'' |
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* The '''highest volcano''' is [[Ojos del Salado]] on the [[Argentina]]–[[Chile]] border. It has the highest summit, {{cvt|6893|m|0}}, of any [[volcano]] on Earth. |
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* The '''highest natural lake''' is an unnamed crater lake on [[Ojos del Salado]] at {{cvt|6390|m|0}},<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.andes.org.uk/peak-info-6000/ojos-del-salado-info.asp |title=Andes Website – Information about Ojos del Salado volcano, a high mountain in South America and the world's highest volcano |access-date=18 January 2013}}</ref> on the Argentina side. Another candidate was [[Lhagba Pool]] on the northeast slopes of [[Mount Everest]], Tibet, at an elevation of {{cvt|6368|m|0}}, which has since dried up.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.highestlake.com/highest-lake-world.html#Lhagba |title=The Highest Lake in the World |access-date=7 September 2007 |archive-date=24 August 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070824054810/http://www.highestlake.com/highest-lake-world.html#Lhagba |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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* The '''highest navigable lake''' is [[Lake Titicaca]], on the border of [[Bolivia]] and [[Peru]] in the [[Andes]], at {{cvt|3812|m|ft|0}}. |
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* The '''highest glacier''' is the [[Khumbu Glacier]] on the southwest slopes of Mount Everest in Nepal, beginning on the west side of [[Lhotse]] at an elevation of {{cvt|7600|to|8000|m|-2}}.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/igsoc/agl/2002/00000034/00000001/art00060?crawler=true |title=ASTER measurement of supraglacial lakes in the Mount Everest region of the Himalaya: ''The main Khumbu Glacier is about 17 km long with elevations ranging from 4900m at the terminus to 7600m at the source''....The 7600m to 8000m elevations are also depicted on numerous detailed topographic maps |access-date=24 November 2008}}</ref> |
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* The '''highest river''' is disputed; one candidate from many possibilities is the [[Ating Ho]], which flows into the [[Aong Tso]] (Hagung Tso), a large lake in Tibet, and has an elevation of about {{cvt|6100|m|0}} at its source at {{Coord|32|49|30|N|81|03|45|E|type:waterbody|name=Ating Ho (source)}}. Another very large and high river is the [[Yarlung Tsangpo]] or upper [[Brahmaputra River]] in Tibet, whose main stem, the [[Maquan River]], has its source at about {{cvt|6020|m|0}} above sea level at {{Coord|30|48|59|N|82|42|45|E|type:waterbody_region:CN-54|name=Maquan River (source)}}.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.100gogo.com/bigben.htm |title=The Mystery of World's highest river and largest Canyon |access-date=7 September 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070921032822/http://www.100gogo.com/bigben.htm |archive-date=21 September 2007 }}</ref> Above these elevations, there are no constantly flowing rivers since the temperature is almost always below freezing. |
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* The '''highest island''' is one of a number of islands in the [[Orba Co]] lake in Tibet, at an elevation of {{cvt|5209|m|0}}.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.worldislandinfo.com/SUPERLATIVESV2.html |title=Island Superlatives |access-date=7 September 2007}}</ref> |
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====Highest points attainable by transportation==== |
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=== Subterranea === |
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* The '''highest point accessible''' |
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<table class="wikitable"> |
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**'''by land vehicle''' is an elevation of {{cvt|6688|m|ft}} on [[Ojos del Salado]] in [[Chile]], which was reached by the Chilean duo of Gonzalo and Eduardo Canales Moya on 21 April 2007 with a modified [[Suzuki Samurai]], setting the high-altitude record for a four-wheeled vehicle. |
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<tr><th>Deepest mine</th><td>3,581 metres (11,748 feet)<br>[[East Rand Mine]], [[South Africa]]</td></tr> |
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** '''by road (dead end)''' is on a mining road to the summit of [[Aucanquilcha]] in [[Chile]], which reaches an elevation of {{cvt|6176|m|ft|0}}. It was once usable by 20-tonne mining trucks.<ref>{{cite journal |last=McIntyre |first=Loren |title=The High Andes |journal=National Geographic |volume=171 |issue=4 |pages=422–460 |publisher=National Geographic Society |date=April 1987 }} (includes description and photos of [[Aucanquilcha]] summit road and mine)</ref> The road is no longer usable. {{Coord|21.214|S|68.475|W|display=inline}} |
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<tr><th>Deepest cave</th><td>2,140 metres (7,021 feet)<br>[[Voronya Cave]], Arabika Massif, [[Abkhazia]], [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]].</td></tr> |
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** '''by road (mountain pass)''' is disputed; there are a number of competing claims for this title due to the definition of "motorable pass" (i.e. a surfaced road or one simply passable by a vehicle): |
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<tr><th>Deepest [[pitch (vertical space)|pitch]] (single vertical drop)</th><td>603 metres (1,978 feet)<br>[[Vrtoglavica Cave]], [[Slovenia]]</td></tr> |
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*** The '''highest [[asphalt concrete|asphalted]] road''' is the single-lane road to [[Umling La]], located {{cvt|17|km|mi}} west of [[Demchok, Ladakh|Demchok]] in [[Ladakh]], [[India]], which reaches {{cvt|5800|m|0}} ("19,300 feet" according to a [[Border Roads Organisation]] sign there that recognizes it as the "World's Highest Motorable Pass").<ref>{{Cite web |date=17 October 2017 |title=Battle for the Highest Motorable Road |url=https://www.motoroids.com/features/battle-for-the-highest-motorable-road-which-pass-takes-you-closest-to-the-stars/ |access-date=17 October 2017 |publisher=Motoroids |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite AV media |title=China Border {{!}} Umling La Pass [ World's Highest Motorable Road ] {{!}} Ep-26 {{!}} Tripura to Ladakh Ride |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zpQQdyDU2EI |access-date=31 December 2022 |via=[[YouTube]]}}</ref> Before the asphalting of the road over Umling La, the highest asphalted road was [[Tibet Autonomous Region|Tibet]]'s [[Semo La]] pass at {{cvt|5565|m|0}}. It is used by trucks and buses regularly.<ref name="icc">{{Cite web| title = ICC – Semo Khardung| author = Assumpció Térmens| website = viewfinderpanoramas.org| publisher = Institut Cartogràfic de Catalunya| date = 20 March 2006| access-date = 5 February 2017| url = http://viewfinderpanoramas.org/ICCSemoKhardung.pdf| language = en}}</ref> The [[Ticlio]] pass, on the Central Road of Peru, is the highest surfaced road in the Americas, at an elevation of {{cvt|4818|m}}. |
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</table> |
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*** The '''highest unsurfaced road''' has several different claimants. All are unsurfaced or gravel roads including [[Mana Pass]], between India and [[Tibet]], which is crossed by a gravel road reaching {{cvt|5610|m|0}}. The heavily trafficked [[Khardung La]] in Ladakh lies at {{cvt|5359|m|0}}. A possibly motorable gravel road crosses [[Marsimik La]] in Ladakh at {{cvt|5582|m|0}}. |
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** '''by train''' is [[Tanggula Pass]], located on the [[Qinghai–Tibet Railway|Qinghai–Tibet (Qingzang) Railway]] in the [[Tanggula Mountains]] of Qinghai/Tibet, [[China]], at {{cvt|5072|m|0}}. The [[Tanggula railway station]] is the world's highest railway station at {{cvt|5068|m|0}}. Before the Qingzang Railway was built, the highest railway ran between [[Lima]] and [[Huancayo]] in Peru, reaching {{cvt|4829|m|0}} at [[Ticlio]].<ref name="highest_railway">{{cite web |title=Destination Guides – World's highest railway, Peru – Wanderlust Travel Magazine |last=Bennett |first=Suzy |publisher=Wanderlust Magazine |url=<!-- http://www.wanderlust.co.uk/article.php?page_id=510 -->http://www.wanderlust.co.uk/magazine/articles/destinations/a-train-journey-through-the-peruvian-andes |date=October 2003 |access-date=10 October 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110725012753/http://www.wanderlust.co.uk/magazine/articles/destinations/a-train-journey-through-the-peruvian-andes |archive-date=25 July 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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** '''by oceangoing vessel''' is a segment of the [[Rhine–Main–Danube Canal]] between the [[Hilpoltstein]] and [[Neumarkt (district)|Bachhausen]] locks in [[Bavaria]], Germany. The locks artificially raise the surface level of the water in the canal to {{cvt|406|m|0}} above mean sea level, higher than any other [[lock (water navigation)|lock]] system in the world, making it the highest point currently accessible by oceangoing commercial watercraft. |
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[[Image:La Rinconada Peru.jpg|thumb|[[La Rinconada, Peru|La Rinconada]], [[Peru]]]] |
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* The '''highest commercial airport''' is [[Daocheng Yading Airport]], [[Sichuan]], China, at {{cvt|4411|m|0}}.<ref name="reuters">{{cite news |title=China opens world's highest civilian airport |author=Ben Blanchard |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-airport-idUSBRE98F0AG20130916 |newspaper=Reuters |date=16 September 2013 |access-date=16 September 2013}}</ref> The proposed [[Nagqu Dagring Airport]] in Tibet, if built, will be {{cvt|25|m|0}} higher at {{cvt|4436|m}}. |
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* The '''highest helipad''' is Sonam, [[Siachen Glacier]], India, at a height of {{cvt|6400|m|0}} above sea level.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://edition.cnn.com/2002/WORLD/asiapcf/south/05/20/siachen.kashmir/ |work=CNN |title=Siachen: The world's highest cold war |date=20 May 2002 |access-date=2 May 2010}}</ref> |
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* The '''highest permanent human settlement''' is [[La Rinconada, Peru]], {{cvt|5100|m|0}}, in the Peruvian [[Andes]]. |
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* The '''farthest road from the Earth's centre''' is the [[Chimborazo#Huts|Road to Carrel Hut]] in the Ecuadorian [[Andes]], at an elevation of {{cvt|4850|m|0}} above sea level and a distance of {{cvt|6382.9|km|0}} from the centre of the Earth.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.summitpost.org/carrel-refuge/578539 |title=Carrel refuge. |work=summitpost.org}}</ref> |
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===Lowest points=== |
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''See also [[List of caves]].'' |
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====Lowest natural points==== |
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{{See also|List of places on land with elevations below sea level}} |
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* The '''deepest point below the ocean's atmospheric surface''' is [[Challenger Deep]], at the bottom of the [[Mariana Trench]], {{cvt|11034|m|0}} <!--- Using figure from Mariana Trench article --->below sea level.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rain.org/ocean/ocean-studies-challenger-deep-mariana-trench.html |title=Challenger Deep – the Mariana Trench |access-date=30 July 2012 |archive-date=24 April 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060424000302/http://www.rain.org/ocean/ocean-studies-challenger-deep-mariana-trench.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> [[Jacques Piccard]] and [[U.S. Navy]] Lieutenant [[Don Walsh]] first reached Challenger Deep in 1960 aboard the [[bathyscaphe]] ''[[Bathyscaphe Trieste|Trieste]]'', followed by filmmaker [[James Cameron]] in 2012 aboard ''[[Deepsea Challenger]]''. Between 2020 and 2022, ''[[DSV Limiting Factor]]'' made 19 dives to Challenger Deep, carrying with it 19 further visitors.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://fivedeeps.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/FDE-Challenger-Release-FINAL-5132019.pdf |title=Deepest Submarine Dive in History, Five Deeps Expedition Conquers Challenger Deep |work=fivedeeps.com |access-date=13 May 2019}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Weinman |first=Steve |date=2022-07-15 |title=Deep-sea mapper can't get much deeper! - Divernet |url=https://divernet.com/world-dives/deep-sea-mapper-cant-get-much-deeper/ |access-date=2023-01-01 |website=divernet.com |language=en-GB}}</ref> |
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* The '''deepest known cave''' is in the [[Veryovkina Cave]] in [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]], where the altitude difference between the cave's entrance and the deepest explored point (the maximum depth) is {{Convert|2209|m||abbr=|sp=us}}, reached in 2019 by a Perovo-speleo team and re-measured more precisely in 2024.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.caverbob.com/wdeep.htm | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211022112054/http://www.caverbob.com/wdeep.htm | url-status=usurped | archive-date=22 October 2021 | title= Worlds Deepest Caves | author= Bob Gulden | author-link=Robert Gulden | date= 13 October 2021 | access-date= 31 October 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |
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| first = Aleksei | last = Barashkov | date = 20 September 2024 |
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| title = В период с 2 по 25 августа текущего года ... |
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| trans-title = In the time from 2 to 25 August this year ... |
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| website = vk.com | language = ru |
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| url = https://vk.com/wall-123856_15260 | access-date = 20 September 2024}}</ref> |
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* The '''lowest point on land not covered by liquid water''' is the canyon under [[Denman Glacier]] in [[Antarctica]], with the bedrock being {{cvt|3,500|m|ft}} below sea level.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-50753113 |title=Denman Glacier: Deepest point on land found in Antarctica |newspaper=[[BBC News|BBC]] |author=Jonathan Amos |date=12 December 2019 |access-date=13 December 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author1=Mathieu Morlighem |author2=Eric Rignot |author3=Tobias Binder |author4=Donald Blankenship |author5=Reinhard Drews |author6=Graeme Eagles |author7=Olaf Eisen |author8=Fausto Ferraccioli |author9=René Forsberg |author10=Peter Fretwell |author11=Vikram Goel |author12=Jamin S. Greenbaum |author13=Hilmar Gudmundsson |author14=Jingxue Guo |author15=Veit Helm |author16=Coen Hofstede |author17=Ian Howat |author18=Angelika Humbert |author19=Wilfried Jokat |author20=Nanna B. Karlsson |author21=Won Sang Lee |author22=Kenichi Matsuoka |author23=Romain Millan |author24=Jeremie Mouginot |author25=John Paden |author26=Frank Pattyn |author27=Jason Roberts |author28=Sebastian Rosier |author29=Antonia Ruppel |author30=Helene Seroussi |author31=Emma C. Smith |author32=Daniel Steinhage |author33=Bo Sun |author34=Michiel R. van den Broeke |author35=Tas D. van Ommen |author36=Melchior van Wessem |author37=Duncan A. Young |title=Deep glacial troughs and stabilizing ridges unveiled beneath the margins of the Antarctic ice sheet |journal=[[Nature Geoscience]] |url=https://www.nature.com/articles/s41561-019-0510-8 |doi=10.1038/s41561-019-0510-8 |date=12 December 2019 |volume=13 |issue=2 |pages=132–137 |s2cid=209331991 |access-date=13 December 2019}}</ref> |
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[[Image:Dead Sea-14.jpg|thumb|The shore of the [[Dead Sea]] in [[Israel]]]] |
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* The '''lowest point on dry land''' is the shore of the [[Dead Sea]], shared by [[Israel]], [[State of Palestine|Palestine]] and [[Jordan]], {{cvt|432.65|m|0}} below sea level. As the Dead Sea waters are receding, the water surface level drops more than {{convert|1|m|ft}} per year.<ref>{{cite news |title=Dead Sea drying: A new low-point for Earth |date=17 June 2016 |first=Kevin |last=Connolly |publisher=BBC |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-36477284 |access-date=1 October 2018}}</ref> |
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* The '''point on the atmospheric surface closest to the Earth's centre''' (interpreted as a natural surface of the land or sea that is accessible by a person) is the surface of the [[Arctic Ocean]] at the [[North Pole#Geographic North Pole|Geographic North Pole]] ({{cvt|6356.77|km|0|disp=or}}). |
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** The '''point on the surface of Earth's crust closest to the Earth's centre''' (interpreted as a land surface or sea floor) is the bottom of [[Litke Deep]], in the [[Arctic Ocean]], at {{cvt|6,351.7043|km|0}} from Earth's centre; the deep's depth relative to sea level is {{cvt|5,449|m|ft|0}}. Because Earth is an [[flattening|oblate]] [[spheroid]] rather than a perfect [[spherical Earth|sphere]], it is [[equatorial bulge|wider]] at the [[equator]] and narrower toward each [[geographical pole|pole]]. Therefore, the bottom of Litke Deep, which is near the North Pole, is closer to Earth's centre than the bottom of Challenger Deep is; the latter is {{cvt|14.7268|km|ft|1}} further, at {{cvt|6,366.4311|km|mi|1}} from Earth's centre.<ref name="ripublication.com">{{cite web|url=https://www.ripublication.com/ijome22/ijomev12n1_03.pdf |title=''Revisiting "Ocean Depth closest to the Center of the Earth"''|publisher= Arjun Tan, Department of Physics, Alabama A & M University|language=English|accessdate=18 September 2022}}</ref> [[Molloy Deep]], also in Arctic Ocean (at {{cvt|6,357.5178|km|mi|0|disp=or}}) from Earth's centre contends closely with Litke Deep, the difference from Earth's centre being just {{cvt|389|m|ft|}}. |
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** The '''point on the ocean surface farthest below sea level''' is located in the [[Indian Ocean]], about {{cvt|1200|km|mi}} southwest of India, the [[Indian Ocean Geoid Low]], about {{cvt|106|m|0}} below the [[global mean sea level]].<ref name="Geoid"/> |
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====Lowest artificial points==== |
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* <!-- Kola borehole is drilled straight down; new borehole length records were mostly horizontal -->The '''lowest point underground''' ever reached was {{cvt|12262|m}} deep (SG-3 at the [[Kola Superdeep Borehole]], which has since been enclosed). |
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* The '''lowest human-sized point underground''' is {{cvt|3900|m}}<ref name="TauTonaExtended">{{cite news |title=TauTona, Anglo Gold – Mining Technology |url=http://www.mining-technology.com/projects/tautona_goldmine/ |publisher=SPG Media Group PLC |date=1 January 2009 |access-date=2 March 2009}}</ref> below ground at the [[TauTona Mine]], [[Carletonville]], South Africa. |
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* The '''lowest (from sea level) artificially made point with open sky''' may be the [[Hambach surface mine]], Germany, which reaches a depth of {{cvt|293|m}} below sea level. |
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* The '''lowest (from surface) artificially made point with open sky''' may be the [[Bingham Canyon Open Pit Copper Mine]], [[Utah]], United States, at a depth of {{cvt|1200|m}} below surface level. |
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* The '''lowest point underwater''' is the {{cvt|10685|m}}-deep (as measured from the [[subsea]] [[wellhead]]) [[oil well|oil and gas well]] drilled on the [[Tiber Oil Field]] in the [[Gulf of Mexico]]. The [[wellhead]] of this well is an additional {{cvt|1259|m}} underwater, for a total distance of {{cvt|11944|m}} as measured from sea level.<ref name="Transocean Release">{{cite web|url=http://www.deepwater.com/fw/main/IDeepwater-Horizon-i-Drills-Worlds-Deepest-Oil-and-Gas-Well-419C151.html |title=Transocean's Ultra-Deepwater Semisubmersible Rig Deepwater Horizon Drills World's Deepest Oil and Gas Well |publisher=Transocean |access-date=7 June 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100426171257/http://www.deepwater.com/fw/main/IDeepwater-Horizon-i-Drills-Worlds-Deepest-Oil-and-Gas-Well-419C151.html |archive-date=26 April 2010}}</ref> {{Coord|28.736667|N|88.386944|W|display=inline}} |
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====Lowest points attainable by transportation==== |
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* The '''lowest point accessible''': |
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** '''by road''', excluding roads in mines, is any of the roads alongside the [[Dead Sea]] in [[Israel]], [[State of Palestine|Palestine]] and [[Jordan]], which are the lowest on Earth at {{cvt|418|m|0}} below sea level. |
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*** The '''lowest undersea highway tunnel''' is the [[Ryfast]] tunnel in [[Norway]], at {{cvt|292|m|0}} below sea level. |
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** '''by train''', excluding tracks in mines, is located in the [[Seikan Tunnel]] in [[Japan]], at {{cvt|240|m|0}} below sea level. For comparison, the undersea [[Channel Tunnel]] between England and France reaches a depth of {{cvt|115|m|0}} below sea level. |
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** '''by ship''', is located in the [[Indian Ocean]], about {{cvt|1200|km|mi}} southwest of India, the [[Indian Ocean Geoid Low]], about {{cvt|106|m|0}} below the [[global mean sea level]].<ref name="Geoid">{{cite journal |last1=Sreejith |first1=K.M. |last2=Rajesh |first2=S. |last3=Majumdar |first3=T.J. |last4=Srinivasa Rao |first4=G. |last5=Radhakrishna |first5=M. |last6=Krishna |first6=K.S. |last7=Rajawat |first7=A.S. |title=High-resolution residual geoid and gravity anomaly data of the northern Indian Ocean – An input to geological understanding |journal=Journal of Asian Earth Sciences |date=January 2013 |volume=62 |pages=616–626 |doi=10.1016/j.jseaes.2012.11.010|bibcode=2013JAESc..62..616S }}</ref> |
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** Some mines have roads accessible from outside or rail tracks, located more than two thousand metres below sea level, for example in some [[South Africa]]n gold mines. |
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* The '''lowest [[railroad station]]''' was formerly the Japanese [[Yoshioka-Kaitei Station]], at {{cvt|150|m|0}} below sea level, but it closed in 2014. The lowest railroad station not inside a tunnel is {{cvt|120|m|0}} below sea level, at [[Beit She'an railway station]] in [[Israel]].{{Citation needed|date=March 2020}} |
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* The '''[[List of lowest airports|lowest airfield]]''' is the [[Bar Yehuda Airfield]], near [[Masada]], [[Israel]], at {{cvt|378|m|0}} below sea level. |
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* The '''lowest international airport''' is [[Atyrau Airport]], near [[Atyrau]], [[Kazakhstan]], at {{cvt|22|m|0}} below sea level, in the basin of the [[Caspian Sea]]. |
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* The '''lowest major city''' is [[Baku]], [[Azerbaijan]], located {{cvt|28|m}} below sea level, which makes it the lowest-lying national capital in the world and also the largest city in the world located below sea level. |
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===Table of extreme elevations and air temperatures by continent=== |
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{{See also|List of elevation extremes by region|List of weather records}} |
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" |
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| rowspan="2" style="vertical-align:bottom;" | '''Continent''' |
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| colspan="3" | '''[[Elevation]] (height [[Above mean sea level|above]]/below [[sea level]])'''{{Ref|A|A}} |
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| colspan="2" | '''[[Temperature|Air temperature]] (recorded)'''<ref name="WMO">[http://wmo.asu.edu/ Global Weather & Climate Extremes] World Meteorological Organization</ref>{{Ref|B|B}} |
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|- |
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| colspan="2" | '''Highest''' |
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| '''Lowest''' |
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| '''Highest''' |
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| '''Lowest''' |
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|- |
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| [[Africa]] || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|5893|m|abbr=in|0}}<br />[[Kilimanjaro]], [[Tanzania]]<ref>The Kilimanjaro 2008 Precise Height Measurement Expedition. ''[http://www.fig.net/pub/fig2009/papers/ts08c/ts08c_fernandes_teamkili2008_3438.pdf Precise Determination of the Orthometric Height of Mt. Kilimanjaro]''</ref> || style="text-align:left;" | [[Image:Kilimanjaro01.jpg|right|100px]] || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|−155|m|abbr=in|0}}<br />[[Lake Assal (Djibouti)|Lake Assal]], [[Djibouti]]<ref>{{cite web|last=Harter |first=Pascale |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/9254468.stm |title=A life of constant thirst beside Djibouti's Lake Assal |work=BBC News |date=4 December 2010 |access-date=25 June 2013}}</ref> || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|55|C}} (disputed<ref name="temp" />)<br />[[Kebili]], [[French Tunisia]]<br />7 July 1931{{Ref|C|C}}|| style="text-align:left;" |{{convert|-23.9|C}}<br />[[Ifrane]], [[French Morocco]]<br />11 February 1935 |
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|- |
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| [[Antarctica]] || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|4892|m|abbr=in|0}}<br />[[Vinson Massif]]<ref name=gnismtv>{{cite gnis|id=18890|type=antarid|name=Mount Vinson|access-date=9 January 2013}}</ref> || style="text-align:left;" | [[Image:Vinson Massif from space.jpg|right|100px]] || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|-50|m|abbr=in|0}}<ref>[http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/soe/display_indicator.cfm?soe_id=62 Indicator 62 - Water levels of Deep Lake, Vestfold Hills] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090705115923/http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/soe/display_indicator.cfm?soe_id=62 |date=5 July 2009 }}, Australian Antarctic Data Centre. Retrieved 15 January 2010.</ref><br />Deep Lake, [[Vestfold Hills]]<br />(compare the [[#Deepest ice|deepest ice]] section below) || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|20.75|C}}<br />[[Comandante Ferraz Antarctic Station]]<br />9 February 2020 || style="text-align:left;" | '''{{convert|−89.2|C}}<br />[[Vostok Station]]'''<br />'''21 July 1983''' |
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|- |
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| rowspan="2" style="vertical-align:center;" | [[Asia]] || rowspan="2" style="vertical-align:center; text-align:left;" | '''{{convert|8848.86|m|abbr=in|0}}<br />[[Mount Everest]], [[Tibet]]–[[Nepal]] Border <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=9428163 |title=The 'Highest' Spot on Earth? |website=NPR.org |access-date=25 June 2013}}</ref>''' || rowspan="2" style="vertical-align:center; text-align:left;" | [[Image:Everest, Himalayas.jpg|right|100px]] || rowspan="2" style="vertical-align:center; text-align:left;" | '''{{convert|−424|m|abbr=in|0}}<br />[[Dead Sea]], [[Israel]]–[[Jordan]]–[[State of Palestine|Palestine]]'''<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.extremescience.com/dead-sea.htm |title=Lowest Elevation: Dead Sea |publisher=Extremescience.com |access-date=25 June 2013}}</ref> || style="vertical-align:center; text-align:left;" | {{convert|54|C}} <!--(disputed?!) rather: 53.9°C / 129°F Mitribah, Kuwait, on July 21, 2016--><br />[[Tirat Zvi]], [[Israel]] (then in the [[Mandatory Palestine|British Mandate of Palestine]])<br />21 June 1942|| style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|−67.7|C}}<small> Measured</small><br />[[Oymyakon]], [[Siberia]], [[Soviet Union]]<br />6 February 1933<ref name="Stepanova">{{cite web|author=N.A. Stepanova |title=On the Lowest Temperatures on Earth|url=http://docs.lib.noaa.gov/rescue/mwr/086/mwr-086-01-0006.pdf |publisher=Docs.lib.noaa.gov |
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|access-date=10 March 2015}}</ref><ref>Weather Underground - Christopher C. Burt - The Coldest Places on Earth https://www.wunderground.com/blog/weatherhistorian/the-coldest-places-on-earth</ref> |
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|- |
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| style="vertical-align:center; text-align:left;" | {{convert|54|C}} <!--(disputed?!)--><br />[[Ahvaz]] Airport, [[Iran]]<br />29 June 2017<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/Weather/iran-ahvaz-hottest-temperature-ever-recorded-world-record-extreme-death-valley-california-a7815771.html |title=Temperatures in Iranian city of Ahvaz hit 129.2F (54C), near hottest on Earth in modern measurements |publisher=independent.com |date=30 June 2017 |access-date=30 June 2017}}</ref> |
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| style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|−71.2|C}}<small> Extrapolated</small><br />[[Oymyakon]], [[Siberia]], [[Soviet Union]]<br />26 January 1926<ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/05/0512_040512_tvoymyakon.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040517011512/http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/05/0512_040512_tvoymyakon.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=17 May 2004 |title=Life Is a Chilling Challenge in Subzero Siberia from the National Geographic |publisher=News.nationalgeographic.com |date=28 October 2010 |access-date=25 June 2013}}</ref> |
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|- |
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| [[Europe]] || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|5642|m|abbr=in|0}}<br />[[Mount Elbrus]], [[Russian Federation]]<ref>[http://peakbagger.com/peak.aspx?pid=10381 Mount Elbrus] at peakbagger.com</ref> || style="text-align:left;" | [[Image:Mount Elbrus May 2008.jpg|right|100px]] || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|−28|m|abbr=in|0}}<br />[[Caspian Sea]] shore, [[Russian Federation]]<ref>{{cite book|author1=Paul A Tucci|author2=Mathew Todd Rosenberg|title=The Handy Geography Answer Book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AzUpZd_D1cUC&pg=PA9|year=2009|publisher=Visible Ink Press|isbn=978-1-57859-272-2|page=9}}</ref> || style="text-align:left;" | 48.8 °C |
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(119.8 °F) |
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[[Floridia]], [[Italy]]<br> |
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11 August 2021 |
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| style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|−58.1|C}}<br />[[Ust-Shchuger]], [[Soviet Union]]<br />31 December 1978 |
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|- |
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| style="vertical-align:center;" | [[North America]] || style="vertical-align:center; text-align:left;" | {{convert|6190.5|m|abbr=in|0}}<br />[[Denali]], [[Alaska]], [[United States]]<ref name=ADN>{{cite press release | url=http://www.usgs.gov/blogs/features/usgs_top_story/new-elevation-for-nations-highest-peak/?from=title | publisher=USGS | title=New Elevation for Nation's Highest Peak | author1=Mark Newell | author2=Blaine Horner | date=2 September 2015 |access-date=26 September 2015}}</ref> || style="vertical-align:center; text-align:left;" | [[Image:Denali Mt McKinley.jpg|right|100px]] || style="vertical-align:center; text-align:left;" | {{convert|−85|m|abbr=in}}<br />[[Badwater Basin]], [[California]], [[United States]]<ref name=NED>{{cite web|url=https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/usgs-national-elevation-dataset-ned-1-meter-downloadable-data-collection-from-the-national-map-|title=USGS National Elevation Dataset (NED) 1 meter Downloadable Data Collection from The National Map 3D Elevation Program (3DEP) - National Geospatial Data Asset (NGDA) National Elevation Data Set (NED)|publisher=[[United States Geological Survey]]|date=21 September 2015|access-date=22 September 2015|archive-date=25 March 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190325085854/https://catalog.data.gov/dataset/usgs-national-elevation-dataset-ned-1-meter-downloadable-data-collection-from-the-national-map-|url-status=dead}}</ref> || style="vertical-align:center; text-align:left;" | '''{{convert|134.1|F|1|order=flip}}<br />[[Furnace Creek, California|Furnace Creek]] (then named [[Furnace Creek, California#History|Greenland Ranch]]), [[Death Valley]], [[California]], [[United States]]<br />10 July 1913'''{{Ref|C|C}} (<small>[[List of weather records#Highest temperatures ever recorded|disputed while still official]], but up to 54.4 °C (129.9 °F)<ref name="temp">{{cite web|url=https://bnonews.com/index.php/2021/07/temperature-reaches-130f-at-death-valley-california/|title=Temperature reaches 130 °F (54.4 °C) at California's Death Valley|date=10 July 2021}}</ref> has also been recorded there in 2020 and 2021, not yet verified by WMO; and {{convert|54.0|C|F}} which is verified.</small>) <!-- The WMO has stated they stand by the 1913 record pending any future investigations. --> || style="text-align:left;" | -69.6 °C (-93.3 °F) |
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[[Summit Camp]], [[Greenland]]<br />22 December 1991 |
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|- |
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| [[Oceania]] || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|4884|m|abbr=in|0}}<br />[[Puncak Jaya]] (Carstensz Pyramid), [[Indonesia]]<br>(compare [[Mount Wilhelm]], [[Aoraki / Mount Cook]] and [[Mount Kosciuszko]])<ref>[http://www.peakbagger.com/peak.aspx?pid=11360 Carstensz Pyramid, Indonesia] at peakbagger.com</ref> || style="text-align:left;" | [[Image:Puncak Jaya icecap 1972.jpg|right|100px]] || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|−15|m|abbr=in|0}}<br />[[Lake Eyre]], [[South Australia]], Australia<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.worldatlas.com/webimage/countrys/au.htm |title=Oceaina |publisher=Worldatlas.com |access-date=25 June 2013}}</ref> || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|50.7|C}}<br/>[[Oodnadatta, South Australia|Oodnadatta]], [[South Australia]], Australia<br/>2 January 1960{{Ref|G|G}} |
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{{convert|50.7|C}}<br/>''[[Onslow, Western Australia]],'' Australia |
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13 January 2022<ref>{{Cite news|date=13 January 2022|title=Australia equals hottest day on record at 50.7C|language=en-GB|work=BBC News|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-59977193|access-date=23 January 2022}}</ref> |
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| style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|−25.6|C}}<br>[[Ranfurly, New Zealand|Ranfurly]], [[Otago]], [[New Zealand]]<br>17 July 1903 |
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|- |
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| [[South America]] || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|6962|m|abbr=in|0}}<br />[[Aconcagua]], [[Mendoza Province|Mendoza]], [[Argentina]]<ref>[http://www.peakbagger.com/peak.aspx?pid=8594 Aconcagua, Argentina] at peakbagger.com</ref> || style="text-align:left;" | [[Image:Aconcagua heli 3.jpg|right|100px]] || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|−105|m|abbr=in|0}}<br />[[Laguna del Carbón]], [[Argentina]]<ref>{{cite web |url=http://geography.about.com/od/learnabouttheearth/a/extremes_2.htm |title=Lowest Points on Land |publisher=Geography.about.com |date=20 June 2013 |access-date=25 June 2013 |archive-date=15 May 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130515142205/http://geography.about.com/od/learnabouttheearth/a/extremes_2.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|48.9|C}}<br />[[Rivadavia, Salta|Rivadavia]], [[Salta Province]], [[Argentina]]<br />11 December 1905 || style="text-align:left;" | {{convert|−32.8|C}}<br />[[Sarmiento, Chubut|Sarmiento]], [[Chubut Province]], [[Argentina]]<br /> 1 June 1907 |
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|- |
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| colspan="6" style="text-align:left;" | |
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<div style="font-size:99%;"> |
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:A.{{Note|A}} Height above sea level is the usual choice of definition for elevation. The point farthest away from the centre of the Earth, however, is [[Chimborazo]] in [[Ecuador]] ({{convert|6267|m|abbr=in|0}}). This is due to the Earth's [[oblate spheroid]] shape, with points near the [[Equator]] being farther out from the centre than those at the poles. |
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:B.{{Note|B}} All temperatures from the [[World Meteorological Organization]] unless noted. |
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:C.{{Note|C}} The former record of {{Convert|57.7|C}} recorded at [[Al 'Aziziyah]], [[Libya]] on 13 September 1922 was ruled no longer valid by the WMO due to mistakes made in the recording process.<ref>{{cite web|author=PWMU |url=https://www.wmo.int/pages/mediacentre/press_releases/pr_956_en.html |title=Ninety-year-old World temperature record in El Azizia (Libya) is invalid Improved data strengthens Climate knowledge |publisher=Wmo.int |access-date=25 June 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160406053728/http://www.wmo.int/pages/mediacentre/press_releases/pr_956_en.html |archive-date=6 April 2016 }}</ref> The 1913 reading is, however, [[List of weather records#Highest temperatures ever recorded|itself controversial]], and a measurement of {{Convert|54.0|C}} at Furnace Creek on 30 June 2013 is undisputed, especially since the same or almost the same temperature has been recorded several times in the 21st century in the same and other places. |
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:E.{{Note|E}} Temperatures greater than {{convert|50|C}} in Spain and [[Portugal]] were recorded in 1881, but the standard with which they were measured and the accuracy of the thermometers used are unknown; therefore, they are not considered official. Unconfirmed reports also indicate that a set of Spanish stations may have hit {{convert|48.0|C}} during the [[2003 European heat wave|2003 heat wave]].<ref>[http://wmo.asu.edu/europe-highest-temperature Europe: Highest Temperature] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090629061515/http://wmo.asu.edu/europe-highest-temperature |date=29 June 2009 }} WMO</ref> |
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:F.{{Note|F}} Greenland is considered by the World Meteorological Organization to be part of WMO region 6 (Europe).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://wmo.asu.edu/western-hemisphere-lowest-temperature |title=Western Hemisphere: Lowest Temperature |publisher=Wmo.asu.edu |date=9 January 1954 |access-date=25 June 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130518042137/http://wmo.asu.edu/western-hemisphere-lowest-temperature |archive-date=18 May 2013 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://wmo.asu.edu/content/north-america-excluding-greenland-lowest-temperature |title=WMO Region IV (North America): Lowest Temperature |publisher=Wmo.asu.edu |access-date=29 March 2020}}</ref> |
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:G.{{Note|G}} A temperature of {{convert|53.1|C}} was recorded in [[Cloncurry, Queensland|Cloncurry]], [[Queensland]] on 16 January 1889 under non-standard exposure conditions and is therefore not considered official.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.abc.net.au/am/content/2003/s1015670.htm|title=Queensland to bake on Christmas Day|publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation|work=[[AM (ABC Radio)|AM]]|date=24 December 2003|access-date=25 June 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091104034004/http://www.abc.net.au/am/content/2003/s1015670.htm|archive-date=4 November 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Trewin|first=Blair|date=December 1997|title=Another look at Australia's record high temperature|journal=Australian Meteorological Magazine|volume=46|issue=4|pages=251–256|url=http://www.bom.gov.au/jshess/docs/1997/trewin.pdf}}</ref></div> |
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|} |
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==Humans and biogeography== |
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[[File:Mollweide Cycle.gif|thumb|400px|On land, vegetation appears on a scale from brown (low vegetation) to dark green (heavy vegetation); at the ocean surface, phytoplankton are indicated on a scale from purple (low) to yellow (high).]] |
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[[File:WorldCenterOfPopulation.png|thumb|400px|For representational purposes only: The point on earth closest to everyone in the world on average was calculated to be in Central Asia, with a mean distance of {{convert|5000|km|sigfig=1|sp=us}}. Its [[antipodes|antipodal point]] is correspondingly the ''farthest'' point from everyone on earth, and is located in the [[Pacific Ocean|South Pacific]] near [[Easter Island]], with a mean distance of {{convert|15000|km|sp=us}}. The data used by this figure is lumped at the country level, and is therefore precise only to country-scale distances, larger nations heavily skewed. Far more granular data -- kilometer level, is now available -- compares with this old "textbook" example.]] |
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In contrast to places with the highest density of life, like terrestrial<ref name="Bar-On Phillips Milo pp. 6506–6511">{{cite journal | last1=Bar-On | first1=Yinon M. | last2=Phillips | first2=Rob | last3=Milo | first3=Ron | title=The biomass distribution on Earth | journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences | volume=115 | issue=25 | date=21 May 2018 | issn=0027-8424 | doi=10.1073/pnas.1711842115 | pages=6506–6511| pmid=29784790 | pmc=6016768 | bibcode=2018PNAS..115.6506B | doi-access=free }}</ref> tropical regions, and beside local extreme conditions, which might only be overcome by [[extremophiles]], there are areas of extreme low amounts of life. |
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Next to terrestrial lifeless areas like the [[Antarctic desert]]'s [[McMurdo Dry Valleys]] and its [[Don Juan Pond]], the most lifeless area in the ocean studied (other than the more general [[Dead zone (ecology)|dead zones]]) is the [[South Pacific Gyre]],<ref name="sediment">{{cite journal|last=D'Hondt|first=Steven|date=July 2009|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|volume=106|issue=28|url=https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/06/090622171408.htm|title = Subseafloor Sediment In South Pacific Gyre One Of Least Inhabited Places On Earth|display-authors=etal|doi=10.1073/pnas.0811793106|pmid=19561304|pages=11651–11656|pmc=2702254|bibcode=2009PNAS..10611651D|doi-access=free}}</ref> corresponding to the [[Point Nemo|oceanic pole of inaccessibility]]. |
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The oceanic pole of inaccessibility is also the [[Antipodes|antipodal]] area of the human [[center of population]] which lies today around southern [[Central Asia]]. Similarly the [[world economy|world's economic]] center of gravity has been drifting since [[Classical antiquity|antiquity]] from Central Asia to Northern Europe and contemporarily back to Central Asia.<ref name="Kabashkin Mikulko p.">{{cite journal | last1=Kabashkin | first1=Igor | last2=Mikulko | first2=Jelena | title=Model of Decision Support for Alternative Choice in the Large Scale Transportation Transit System | journal=Unpublished | year=2014 | doi=10.13140/2.1.1874.9440 | url=http://rgdoi.net/10.13140/2.1.1874.9440 | access-date=28 August 2022 | page=}}</ref> The related centre of gravity of the worlds [[carbon emission]] has shifted from Britain during the [[Industrial Revolution]] to the Atlantic, back again and contemporarily into Central Asia.<ref name="Kommenda 2021">{{cite web | last=Kommenda | first=Niko | title=UK, US, China: how the world's carbon 'centre of gravity' moved over 200 years | website=the Guardian | date=13 October 2021 | url=https://www.theguardian.com/environment/ng-interactive/2021/oct/13/uk-us-china-how-the-worlds-carbon-centre-of-gravity-moved-over-200-years | access-date=28 August 2022}}</ref> |
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==Remoteness== |
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===Poles of inaccessibility=== |
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{{main|Pole of inaccessibility}} |
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Each continent has its own [[Pole of inaccessibility#Continental poles of inaccessibility|continental pole of inaccessibility]], defined as the place on the continent that is farthest from any ocean. Similarly, each ocean has its own [[Pole of inaccessibility#Oceanic pole of inaccessibility|oceanic pole of inaccessibility]], defined as the place in the ocean that is farthest from any land. |
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[[File:Distancia a la costa.png|thumb|upright=1.8|Map of distance to the nearest coastline<ref name="Garcia2007">{{cite journal |last1=Garcia-Castellanos |first1=Daniel |last2=Lombardo |first2=Umberto |title=Poles of inaccessibility: A calculation algorithm for the remotest places on earth |doi=10.1080/14702540801897809 |periodical=Scottish Geographical Journal |access-date=10 November 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140629230429/http://cuba.ija.csic.es/~danielgc/papers/Garcia-Castellanos,%20Lombardo,%202007,%20SGJ.pdf|archive-date=29 June 2014|url-status=dead|date=September 2007 |volume=123 |issue=3 |pages=227–233 |bibcode=2007ScGJ..123..227G |s2cid=55876083 |url=http://cuba.ija.csic.es/~danielgc/papers/Garcia-Castellanos,%20Lombardo,%202007,%20SGJ.pdf }}</ref> (including oceanic islands, but not lakes) with red spots marking the poles of inaccessibility of main [[landmass]]es, [[Great Britain]], and the [[Iberian Peninsula]], and a blue dot marking the oceanic pole of inaccessibility. Thin isolines are {{convert|250|km|abbr=on}} apart; thick lines {{convert|1000|km|abbr=on}}. [[Mollweide projection]].]] |
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====Continental==== |
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* The '''most distant point from an ocean''' is the Eurasian Pole of Inaccessibility (or "EPIA") {{Coord|46|17|N|86|40|E|name=Continental Pole of Inaccessibility}}, in [[China]]'s [[Xinjiang]] region near the border with Kazakhstan. Calculations have shown that this point, located in the [[Dzoosotoyn Elisen Desert]], is {{cvt|2645|km}} from the nearest coastline. The nearest settlement to the EPIA is Suluk at {{Coord|46|15|N|86|50|E|name=Suluk}}, about {{cvt|11|km|mi|sigfig=1}} to the east.{{citation needed|date=March 2015}} A 2007 study suggests that the historical calculation of the EPIA failed to recognize the point where the [[Gulf of Ob]] joins the Arctic Ocean, and proposes instead that varying definitions of coastline could result in other locations for the EPIA: |
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** EPIA1, somewhere between {{Coord|44|17|N|82|11|E|name=EPIA1.1}} and {{Coord|44|29|N|82|19|E|name=EPIA1.2}}, is about {{cvt|2510|+/-|10|km}} from the nearest ocean. |
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** EPIA2, somewhere between {{Coord|45|17|N|88|08|E|name=EPIA2.1}} and {{Coord|45|28|N|88|14|E|name=EPIA2.2}}, is about {{cvt|2514|+/-|7|km}} from the nearest ocean.<ref name="PIA"/> |
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:If adopted, this would place the final EPIA roughly {{cvt|130|km|mi|sigfig=1}} closer to the ocean than the point that is currently agreed upon.<ref name="PIA">{{cite journal|doi=10.1080/14702540801897809 |volume=123 |issue=3 |pages=227–233 |last1=Garcia-Castellanos |first1=Daniel |first2=Umberto |last2=Lombardo |title=Poles of Inaccessibility: A Calculation Algorithm for the Remotest Places on Earth |journal=Scottish Geographical Journal |issn=1470-2541 |year=2007 |url=http://cuba.ija.csic.es/~danielgc/papers/Garcia-Castellanos,%20Lombardo,%202007,%20SGJ.pdf |publisher=Informa UK |bibcode=2007ScGJ..123..227G |s2cid=55876083 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140803055158/http://cuba.ija.csic.es/~danielgc/papers/Garcia-Castellanos%2C%20Lombardo%2C%202007%2C%20SGJ.pdf |archive-date=3 August 2014 }}</ref> Coincidentally, EPIA1, or EPIA2, and the most remote of the [[Pole of inaccessibility#Oceanic pole of inaccessibility|Oceanic Pole of Inaccessibility]] (specifically, the point in the [[South Pacific Ocean]] that is farthest from land) are similarly remote; EPIA1 is less than {{cvt|200|km}} closer to the ocean than the Oceanic Pole of Inaccessibility is to land. |
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* The continental poles of inaccessibility for the other continents are as follows: |
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** [[Africa]]: {{Coord|5.65|N|26.17|E|name=Continental Pole of Inaccessibility of Africa}},<ref name="PIA"/> close to the [[tripoint]] of the [[Central African Republic]], [[South Sudan]], and the [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]] |
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** [[Australia (continent)|Australia]]: either {{Coord|23|2|S|132|10|E|name=Australian Pole of Inaccessibility}},<ref>[http://www.ga.gov.au/education/facts/dimensions/centre.htm Centre of Australia, States and Territories] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080822124000/https://www.ga.gov.au/education/facts/dimensions/centre.htm |date=22 August 2008 }}, Geoscience Australia</ref> or {{Coord|23.17|S|132.27|E|name=Continental Pole of Inaccessibility of Australia}},<ref name="PIA"/> near [[Papunya]], [[Northern Territory]] |
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** [[North America]]: {{Coord|43.36|N|101.97|W|name=Pole of Inaccessibility North America}},<ref name="PIA"/> between [[Kyle, South Dakota]] and [[Allen, South Dakota]], [[United States]]. |
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** [[South America]]: {{Coord|14.05|S|56.85|W|name=Continental Pole of Inaccessibility in South America}},<ref name="PIA"/> near [[Arenápolis]], [[Mato Grosso]], [[Brazil]] |
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====Oceanic==== |
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* The '''most distant point from land''' is the Pacific pole of inaccessibility (also called "[[Point Nemo]]", in a region known as the [[spacecraft cemetery]]), which lies in the [[South Pacific Ocean]] at {{Coord|48|52.6|S|123|23.6|W|type:landmark|name=Point Nemo}}, about {{cvt|2688|km|0}} from the nearest land (equidistant from [[Ducie Island]] in the [[Pitcairn Islands]] to the north, [[Motu Nui]] off [[Rapa Nui]] to the northeast, and Maher Island off [[Siple Island]] near [[Marie Byrd Land]], [[Antarctica]], to the south).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/nemo.html |title=Where is Point Nemo? |work=NOAA |access-date=20 February 2015}} |
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</ref> The centre of the Pacific Ocean and the [[Water Hemisphere]] lie west to it, closer to [[Oceania]], off the coast of [[Kiribati]] at {{Coord|47.411667|N|2.620833|W|format=dms|type:landmark_region:FR_scale:10000|display=inline}} and [[New Zealand]] at {{Coord|47.411667|S|177.379167|E|format=dms|type:landmark_region:FR_scale:10000|display=inline}} respectively. |
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===Other places considered the most remote=== |
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[[Image:Bouvet Island ISS017-E-16161 no text.JPG|thumb|[[Bouvet Island]]]] |
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* The '''most remote island''' is [[Bouvet Island]], a small, uninhabited island in the [[South Atlantic Ocean]] that is a [[dependencies of Norway|dependency]] of [[Norway]]. It lies at coordinates {{Coord|54|26|S|3|24|E|type:landmark|name=most remote island}}. The nearest land is the uninhabited [[Queen Maud Land]], [[Antarctica]] (also claimed by Norway), over {{cvt|1600|km|mi|sigfig=1}} to the south. The nearest inhabited lands are [[Gough Island]], {{cvt|1845|km|0}} away, [[Tristan da Cunha]], {{cvt|2260|km|0}} away, and the coast of [[South Africa]], {{cvt|2580|km|0}} away. |
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* The title for '''most remote inhabited island or archipelago''' (the farthest away from any other permanently inhabited place) depends on how the question is interpreted. If the south Atlantic island [[Tristan da Cunha]] (population about 300) and its dependency [[Gough Island]] (with a small staffed research post), which are {{cvt|399|km|0}} from each other, are considered part of the same archipelago, or if Gough Island is not counted because it has no permanent residents, then Tristan da Cunha is the world's most remote inhabited island/archipelago: the main island, also called Tristan da Cunha, is {{cvt|2434|km|0}} from the island [[Saint Helena]], {{cvt|2816|km|0}} from [[South Africa]], and {{cvt|3360|km}} from South America. It is {{cvt|2260|km|0}} away from uninhabited [[Bouvet Island]]. However, if Gough and [[Tristan da Cunha]] are considered separately, they disqualify each other, and the most remote inhabited island is [[Easter Island]] in the South Pacific Ocean, which lies {{cvt|2075|km|mi}} from [[Pitcairn Island]] (about 50 residents in 2013), {{cvt|2606|km|0}} from [[Rikitea]] on the island of [[Mangareva]] (the nearest town with a population over 500), and {{cvt|3512|km|mi}} from the coast of [[Chile]] (the nearest continental point and the country of which Easter Island is part). The [[Kerguelen Islands]] in the southern Indian Ocean are another contender, lying {{cvt|1340|km|mi}} from the small [[Alfred Faure]] scientific station in [[Île de la Possession]], but otherwise more than {{cvt|3300|km|mi}} from the coast of [[Madagascar]] (the nearest permanently inhabited place), {{cvt|450|km|0}} northwest of the uninhabited [[Heard Island]] and [[McDonald Islands]] (both a part of [[Australia]]), and {{cvt|1440|km|mi}} from the non-permanent scientific station located in [[Île Amsterdam]]. |
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* '''Remote cities''' |
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** The most remote city with a population in excess of one million from the nearest city with a population in excess of one million is [[Auckland]], [[New Zealand]]. The nearest city of comparable size or greater is [[Sydney]], [[Australia]], {{cvt|2168.9|km|mi}} away.<ref>[http://www.daftlogic.com/projects-google-maps-distance-calculator.htm Draft Logic – Google Maps Distance Calculator], accessed 4 September 2011</ref> |
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** The most remote city with a population in excess of one million from the nearest city with a population above 100,000 is [[Perth]], Australia, located {{cvt|2138|km}}<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.travelmath.com/flying-distance/from/Perth,+Australia/to/Adelaide,+Australia |title=Flight Distance from Perth, Australia to Adelaide, Australia |work=travelmath.com}}</ref> away from [[Adelaide]], Australia. |
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** The most remote city with a population in excess of 100,000 from the nearest city with a population in excess of 100,000 is [[Honolulu]], [[Hawaii]], United States. The nearest city of comparable size or greater is [[San Francisco]], {{cvt|3850|km}} away.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://cityextremes.com/isolated.php |title=The Most Isolated Cities of the World |work=cityextremes.com}}</ref> |
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** The most remote national capitals are [[Wellington]], New Zealand, and [[Canberra]], Australia, which are {{cvt|2326|km|0}} apart from each other and neither is closer to another capital. |
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* The '''most remote airport in the world''' from another airport is [[Mataveri International Airport]] (IPC) on [[Easter Island]], which has a single runway for military and public use. It is located {{cvt|2603|km|0}} from [[Totegegie Airport]] (GMR; very few flights) in the [[Gambier Islands]], [[French Polynesia]] and {{cvt|3759|km|0}} from [[Arturo Merino Benítez International Airport|Santiago, Chile]] (SCL; a fairly large airport). In comparison, the airport at the [[Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station]] (NZSP) is not very remote at all, being located only {{cvt|1355|km|mi|0}} from [[Williams Field]] (NZWD) near [[Ross Island]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.gcmap.com/mapui?P=IPC-SCL%2CIPC-GMR%2CNZWD-NZSP&DU=km |title=Great Circle Mapper |work=gcmap.com}}</ref><!--but is it the most remote airport from city/inhabited place, or if not, which one is? especially when compare to Tibet's 2nd highest airport at 2011.--> |
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===Farthest-apart cities=== |
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The pairs of cities (with a population over 100,000) with the greatest distance between them ([[antipodes]]) are:<ref>{{cite web |url=http://furthestcity.com/ |title=Discover The Furthest City on Earth From Wherever You Live |work=furthestcity.com}}</ref> |
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# [[Xinghua, China]] to [[Rosario]], Argentina: {{cvt|19996|km|0}}<ref>{{cite web |url=http://furthestcity.com/city.php?ID=ROSARIO_ARGENTINA |title=What's the Farthest City and Country from Rosario, Argentina? |work=furthestcity.com}}</ref> |
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# [[Lu'an, China]] to [[Río Cuarto, Argentina]]: {{cvt|19994|km|0}}<ref>{{cite web |url=http://furthestcity.com/city.php?ID=LIUAN_ANHUI_CHINA |title=What's the Farthest City and Country from Liu'an, Anhui, China? |work=furthestcity.com}}</ref> |
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# [[Subang Jaya, Malaysia]] to [[Cuenca, Ecuador]]: {{cvt|19989|km|0}}<ref>{{cite web |url=http://furthestcity.com/city.php?ID=CUENCA_ECUADOR |title=What's the Farthest City and Country from Cuenca, Ecuador? |work=furthestcity.com}}</ref> |
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# [[Shanghai, China]] to [[Concordia, Entre Ríos|Concordia, Argentina]]: {{Cvt|19,984|km|mi|abbr=}}<ref>{{Cite web|title=What's the Farthest City and Country from Shanghai, China?|url=http://furthestcity.com/city.php?ID=SHANGHAI_CHINA|access-date=25 September 2020|website=furthestcity.com}}</ref> |
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# [[Xi'an, China]] to [[Rancagua, Chile]]: {{cvt|19972|km|0}}<ref>{{cite web |url=http://furthestcity.com/city.php?ID=RANCAGUA_CHILE |title=What's the Farthest City and Country from Rancagua, Chile? |work=furthestcity.com}}</ref> |
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# [[Rui'an|Rui'an, China]] to [[Resistencia, Chaco|Resistencia, Argentina]]: {{Cvt|19,967|km|mi|abbr=}}<ref>{{Cite web|title=What's the Farthest City and Country from Resistencia, Argentina?|url=http://furthestcity.com/city.php?ID=RESISTENCIA_ARGENTINA|access-date=25 September 2020|website=furthestcity.com}}</ref> |
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# [[Yantai|Yantai, China]] to [[Tandil|Tandil, Argentina]]: {{cvt|19965|km|0}}<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://furthestcity.com/city.php?ID=YANTAI_SHANDONG_CHINA|title=What's the Farthest City and Country from Yantai, Shandong, China?|website=furthestcity.com|access-date=15 April 2020}}</ref> |
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# [[Lichuan, Hubei|Lichuan, China]] to [[Coquimbo|Coquimbo, Chile]]: {{Cvt|19,964|km|mi|abbr=}}<ref>{{Cite web|title=What's the Farthest City and Country from Coquimbo, Chile?|url=http://furthestcity.com/city.php?ID=COQUIMBO_CHILE|access-date=25 September 2020|website=furthestcity.com}}</ref> |
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# [[Bandung|Bandung, Indonesia]] to [[Piedecuesta|Piedecuesta, Colombia]]: {{Cvt|19,962|km|mi|abbr=}}<ref>{{Cite web|title=What's the Farthest City and Country from Bandung, Indonesia?|url=http://furthestcity.com/city.php?ID=BANDUNG_INDONESIA|access-date=25 September 2020|website=furthestcity.com}}</ref> |
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# [[Salamanca, Spain]] to [[Lower Hutt, New Zealand]]: {{cvt|19961|km|0}}<ref>{{cite web |url=http://furthestcity.com/city.php?ID=SALAMANCA_SPAIN |title=What's the Farthest City and Country from Salamanca, Spain? |work=furthestcity.com}}</ref> |
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The pair of airports with scheduled flights having the greatest distance between them are [[Sultan Mahmud Badaruddin II International Airport]], which serves [[Palembang]], [[Indonesia]], and [[Benito Salas Airport]], which serves [[Neiva, Huila|Neiva]], [[Colombia]], located about 10,819 nautical miles (20,037 km)<!-- EACH TO 5-DIGIT PRECISION --> apart.<ref>[http://www.gcmap.com/mapui?P=plm-nva&PC=%23ff0000&RC=%23000080&DU=nm&SU=kts Great Circle Mapper] Access date: 11 June 2020</ref> See [[longest flights]] for the longest non-stop flights. |
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==Centre== |
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{{Main|Geographical center of Earth}} |
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{{Other|Axis mundi}} |
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Since the Earth is a [[spheroid]], its centre (the [[core of the Earth|core]]) is thousands of kilometres beneath its [[Crust (geology)|crust]]. Still, there have been attempts to define various "centrepoints" on the Earth's surface. |
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* The '''centre of the standard geographic model''' as viewed on a traditional world map is the point 0°, 0° (the [[coordinates]] of zero degrees latitude by zero degrees longitude), which is located in the [[Atlantic Ocean]] about {{cvt|614|km}} south of [[Accra]], [[Ghana]], in the [[Gulf of Guinea]]. It lies at the intersection of the [[Equator]] and the [[IERS Reference Meridian|Prime Meridian]], is marked with a buoy, and is sometimes called [[Null Island]]. However, the selection of the Prime Meridian as the 0° longitude meridian depended on cultural and historical factors and is therefore geographically arbitrary (any of the Earth's meridians could, in principle, be defined as 0° longitude); consequently, the position of the "Null Island" centrepoint is also arbitrary. |
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* The '''[[Centre of population#World|centre of population]]''', the place to which there is the shortest average route for every individual human being in the world, could also be considered a "centre of the world". This point is located in the north of the [[Indian subcontinent]], although the precise location has never been calculated and is constantly shifting due to changes in the distribution of the human population across the planet. |
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==Geophysical extremes== |
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===Tallest mountain=== |
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{{Further|List of tallest mountains in the Solar System}} |
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* [[Mauna Kea]], tallest mountain from base-to-peak, with a dry [[prominence]] of {{convert|9330|m|abbr=on|0}} and a wet prominence above sea level of {{convert|4,207.3|m|abbr=on|0}}. |
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* [[Denali]], tallest mountain from base-to-peak on land, measuring {{convert|5500|meter|feet|abbr=on}}.<ref name="Helman2005">{{cite book|author=Adam Helman|title=The Finest Peaks: Prominence and Other Mountain Measures|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kr8AM-w8IFQC|access-date=9 December 2012|date=2005|publisher=Trafford Publishing|isbn=978-1-4120-5995-4|archive-date=31 October 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201031053845/https://books.google.com/books?id=kr8AM-w8IFQC|url-status=live}} On p. 20 of Helman (2005):"the base to peak rise of Mount McKinley is the largest of any mountain that lies entirely above sea level, some {{convert|18000|feet|meter|abbr=on}}"</ref> |
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===Greatest vertical drop=== |
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{{further|List of tallest cliffs}} |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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| Greatest purely vertical drop || {{cvt|4100|ft|order=flip}}<br />[[Mount Thor]], [[Auyuittuq National Park]], [[Baffin Island]], [[Nunavut]], Canada (summit elevation {{convert|1675|m|abbr=on|0}})<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dailygalaxy.com/my_weblog/2010/03/mount-thor-the-greatest-vertical-drop-on-earth.html |title=Mount Thor -The Greatest Vertical Drop on Earth! |publisher=Dailygalaxy.com |date=9 March 2010 |access-date=25 June 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100312051404/https://www.dailygalaxy.com/my_weblog/2010/03/mount-thor-the-greatest-vertical-drop-on-earth.html |archive-date=March 12, 2010}}</ref><ref name=bivouac>{{cite bivouac|id=4155|name=Thor Peak|access-date=30 November 2009}}</ref> || [[Image:Mount Thor Peak 1997-08-07.jpg|right|100px]] |
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|- |
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| Greatest nearly vertical drop || {{convert|1340|m|abbr=on|0}}<br />[[Trango Towers]], [[Gilgit-Baltistan|Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan ]] (summit elevation {{convert|6286|m|abbr=on|0}}) || [[Image:GreatTrango.jpg|right|100px]] |
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|- |
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| Greatest mountain face || {{convert|4600|m|abbr=on|0}} <br /> [[Nanga Parbat]], Rupal Face, [[Azad Kashmir|Azad Kashmir, Pakistan]] || [[File:Nanga Parbat Rupal Base camp, Gilgit Baltistan.JPG|right|100px]] |
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|- |
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| Greatest ocean cliff || [[Kermadec Trench]], with cliffs around {{convert|8000|m|abbr=on}} tall || [[File:Kermadec Arc.jpg|right|100px]] |
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|} |
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===Subterranean=== |
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{{Further|Mining#Records|List of deepest caves}} |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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| Deepest [[Mining|mine]] below ground level|| {{convert|4000|m|abbr=on}}<br />[[Mponeng Gold Mine]], [[Gauteng Province]], [[South Africa]] |
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|- |
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| Deepest mine below sea level|| {{convert|2733|m|abbr=on|0}} below sea level<br />[[Kidd Mine]], [[Ontario]], Canada |
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|- |
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| Deepest [[open-pit mine]] below ground level|| {{convert|1200|m|abbr=on}}<br />[[Bingham Canyon Mine]], [[Utah]], United States |
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|- |
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| Deepest open-pit mine below sea level|| {{convert|293|m|abbr=on|0}} below sea level<br />[[Tagebau Hambach]], Germany |
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|- |
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| Deepest [[cave]] (measured from the entrance) || {{convert|2204|m|abbr=on|0}}<br />[[Veryovkina Cave|Veryovkina]], [[Arabika Massif]], [[Abkhazia]], [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]]<ref>{{cite web|last1=Gulden|first1=Bob|author-link=Robert Gulden |title=World's Deepest Caves|url=http://www.caverbob.com/wdeep.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211022112054/http://www.caverbob.com/wdeep.htm|url-status=usurped|archive-date=22 October 2021|access-date=8 April 2018}}</ref> |
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|- |
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| Deepest [[pitch (vertical space)|pitch]] (single vertical drop) || {{convert|1026|m|abbr=on|0}}<br />[[Tian Xing Cave]], China<ref>{{cite web|last1=Starritt|first1=Alex|title=Climbers explore one of world's deepest underground shafts|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/3284948/Climbers-explore-one-of-worlds-deepest-underground-shafts.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/3284948/Climbers-explore-one-of-worlds-deepest-underground-shafts.html |archive-date=12 January 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live|website=Daily Telegraph|date=30 October 2008 |publisher=Telegraph Media Group Limited|access-date=22 September 2015}}{{cbignore}}</ref> |
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|- |
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| Deepest [[borehole]] || {{convert|12261|m|abbr=on|0}}<br />[[Kola Superdeep Borehole]], Russia<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.atlasobscura.com/places/kola-superdeep-borehole|title=Kola Superdeep Borehole|website=Atlas Obscura}}</ref> |
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|- |
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| Deepest [[borehole]] by depth below sea level || {{convert|11944 |m|abbr=on|0}} (10,685 m well at 1,259 m deep seabed)<br />The Tiber well, [[Gulf of Mexico]], United States <ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.rigzone.com/news/oil_gas/a/79913/bp_makes_giant_deepwater_discovery_with_tiber/ |title=BP Deepeater Well|website=Rigzone}}</ref> |
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|} |
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===Greatest oceanic depths=== |
===Greatest oceanic depths=== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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| [[Atlantic Ocean]] || {{convert|8376|m|abbr=on|0}}<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://fivedeeps.com/home/expedition/atlantic/|title=Atlantic Ocean|website=Five Deeps Expedition|language=en-GB|access-date=24 January 2020}}</ref><br />[[Milwaukee Deep]] (within the [[Brownson Deep]]), [[Puerto Rico Trench]] |
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|- |
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<tr><th>[[Arctic Ocean]]</th><td>5,450 metres (17,881 feet)<br>[[Litke Deep]], [[Eurasia Basin]]</td></tr> |
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| [[Arctic Ocean]] || {{convert|5550|m|abbr=on|0}}<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://fivedeeps.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Molloy-Press-Release-final.pdf|title=Five Deeps Expedition is complete after historic dive to the bottom of the Arctic Ocean}}</ref><br />[[Molloy Deep]], [[Fram Strait]] |
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<tr><th>[[Indian Ocean]]</th><td>8,047 metres (26,401 feet)<br>[[Diamantina Deep]], [[Diamantina Trench]], [[South East Indian Basin]]</td></tr> |
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|- |
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<tr><th>[[Mediterranean Sea]]</th><td>5,267 metres (17,280 feet)<br>[[Calypso Deep]], [[Ionian Basin]]</td></tr> |
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| [[Indian Ocean]] || {{convert|7192|m|abbr=on|0}}<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://fivedeeps.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/JT-Diamantina-Press-Release-FINAL-UPDATED.pdf|title=Deep sea pioneermakes history again as first human to dive to the deepest point in the Indian Ocean, the Java Trench}}</ref><br />[[Sunda Trench]] |
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<tr><th>[[Pacific Ocean]]</th><td>'''10,924 metres (35,840 feet)<br>[[Challenger Deep]], [[Mariana Trench]]'''</td></tr> |
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|- |
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<tr><th>[[Southern Ocean]]</th><td>7,235 metres (23,690 feet)<br>[[South Sandwich Trench]] (southernmost portion, at 60°S)</td></tr> |
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|[[Mediterranean Sea]] || {{convert|5267|m|abbr=on|0}}<br />[[Calypso Deep]], [[Hellenic Trench]] |
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<tr><td colspan="2" align="center">'''Bold''' entry is an Earth-wide extreme.</td></tr> |
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|- |
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</table> |
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| [[Pacific Ocean]] || '''{{convert|10928|m|abbr=on|0}}'''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://fivedeeps.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/FDE-Challenger-Release-FINAL-5132019.pdf|title=Deepest Submarine Dive in History, Five Deeps Expedition Conquers Challenger Deep}}</ref>'''<br />[[Challenger Deep]], [[Mariana Trench]]'''<ref name="Daily Reports for R/V KILO MOANA">{{cite news|url=http://www.soest.hawaii.edu/UMC/Reports/Archives/KMreportJuneJuly2009.html |title=Daily Reports for R/V KILO MOANA June and July 2009 |date=4 June 2009 |publisher=University of Hawaii Marine Center |access-date=4 June 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120524194643/http://www.soest.hawaii.edu/UMC/Reports/Archives/KMreportJuneJuly2009.html |archive-date=24 May 2012 }}</ref> |
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|- |
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| [[Southern Ocean]] || {{convert|7433.6|m|abbr=on|0}}<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://fivedeeps.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/FDE-SST-Press-Release-Final.pdf|title=Explorer makes history as first human to successfully dive to the deepest point in the Southern Ocean, in the South Sandwich Trench}}</ref><br />[[South Sandwich Trench]] (southernmost portion, at {{coordinates|60|28.46|S|025|32.32|W|display=inline}}) |
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|} |
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===Deepest ice=== |
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Ice sheets on land, but having the base below sea level. Places under ice are not considered to be on land. |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|[[Denman Glacier|Denman Subglacial Trench]]|| {{convert|−3500|m|abbr=on}} || [[Antarctica]] |
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|- |
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|Trough beneath [[Jakobshavn Isbræ]] || {{convert|-1512|m|abbr=on|0}}<ref>Plummer, Joel. [https://www.cresis.ku.edu/~plummer/jakob.html#Bed_1 Jakobshavn Bed Elevation] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100627071506/https://www.cresis.ku.edu/~plummer/jakob.html |date=27 June 2010 }}, Center for the Remote Sensing of the Ice Sheets, Dept of Geography, University of Kansas.</ref>|| [[Greenland]], [[Denmark]] |
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|} |
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==Meteorological extremes== |
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===Coldest and hottest inhabited places on Earth=== |
===Coldest and hottest inhabited places on Earth=== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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| Hottest inhabited place || [[Dallol, Ethiopia]] (Amharic: ዳሎል), whose annual mean temperature was recorded from 1960 to 1966 as {{convert|34.4|C}}.<ref>p. 9, ''Weather Experiments'', Muriel Mandell and Dave Garbot, Sterling Publishing Company, Inc., 2006, {{ISBN|1-4027-2157-9}}.</ref> The average daily maximum temperature during the same period was {{convert|41.1|C}}.<ref>Average of table on p. 26, ''Extreme Weather: A Guide & Record Book'', Christopher C. Burt and Mark Stroud, New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2007, {{ISBN|0-393-33015-X}}.</ref> |
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<tr><th> Hottest inhabited place</th><td>[[Dallol, Ethiopia]] average temperature is 34 °C (93.2 °F) </td> |
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|- |
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<tr><th> Coldest inhabited place</th><td>[[Eureka, Nunavut]], [[Canada]] daily average temperature is −19.7 °C (−3.46 °F) <ref>[http://www.climate.weatheroffice.ec.gc.ca/climate_normals/results_e.html?Province=ALL&StationName=Eureka&SearchType=BeginsWith&LocateBy=Province&Proximity=25&ProximityFrom=City&StationNumber=&IDType=MSC&CityName=&ParkName=&LatitudeDegrees=&LatitudeMinutes=&LongitudeDegrees=&LongitudeMinutes=&NormalsClass=A&SelNormals=&StnId=1750& Canadian Climate Normals 1971-2000 - Eureka]</ref></td> |
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| rowspan=2|Coldest inhabited place ||[[Oymyakon]] (Russian: Оймяко́н), a rural locality (selo) in Oymyakonsky District of the [[Sakha Republic]], the Russian Federation, has the coldest monthly mean, with {{convert|-46.4|C|F|abbr=}} the average temperature in January, the coldest month. [[Eureka, Nunavut|Eureka]], Nunavut, Canada has the lowest annual mean temperature at {{convert|-19.7|C}}.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://climate.weatheroffice.gc.ca/climate_normals/results_e.html?stnID=1750&lang=e&dCode=1&StationName=EUREKA&SearchType=Contains&province=ALL&provBut=&month1=0&month2=12 |title=Canadian Climate Normals 1971-2000 |publisher=Climate.weatheroffice.gc.ca |date=4 February 2013 |access-date=25 June 2013}}</ref> |
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</table> |
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|- |
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|The [[South Pole]] and some other places in [[Antarctica]] are colder and are populated year-round, but almost everyone stays less than a year and could be considered visitors, not inhabitants. |
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|} |
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===Ground temperatures=== |
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===Northern and southernmost points of land on Earth=== |
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Temperatures measured directly on the ground may exceed air temperatures by 30 to 50 °C.<ref name=running2011>{{Cite journal|doi=10.1175/2011BAMS3067.1|title=Satellite Finds Highest Land Skin Temperatures on Earth|year=2011|last1=Running|first1=Steven W.|last2=Zhao|first2=Maosheng|last3=Mildrexler|first3=David J.|journal=Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society|volume=92|issue=7|pages=855–860|doi-broken-date=2 December 2024 |bibcode=2011BAMS...92..855M|doi-access=free}}</ref> A ground temperature of 84 °C (183.2 °F) has been recorded in [[Port Sudan]], [[Sudan]].<ref>Table 9.2, p. 158, ''Dryland Climatology'', Sharon E. Nicholson, Cambridge University Press, 2011, {{ISBN|1139500244}}.</ref> A ground temperature of 93.9 °C (201 °F) was recorded in [[Furnace Creek, California|Furnace Creek]], [[Death Valley]], [[California]], United States on 15 July 1972; this may be the highest natural ground surface temperature ever recorded.<ref>A possible world record maximum natural ground surface temperature, Paul Kubecka, ''Weather'', '''56''', #7 (July 2001), ''Weather'', pp. 218-221, {{doi|10.1002/j.1477-8696.2001.tb06577.x}}.</ref> The theoretical maximum possible ground surface temperature has been estimated to be between 90 and 100 °C for dry, darkish soils of low thermal conductivity.<ref>[http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/abs/10.1175/1520-0450%281992%29031%3C1096%3AEMLST%3E2.0.CO%3B2 Extreme Maximum Land Surface Temperatures], J. R. Garratt, Journal of Applied Meteorology, '''31''', #9 (September 1992), pp. 1096–1105, {{doi|10.1175/1520-0450(1992)031<1096:EMLST>2.0.CO;2}}.</ref> |
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<table class="wikitable"> |
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<tr><th> Northernmost point on Earth</th><td>[[Kaffeklubben Island]], east of [[Greenland]] ({{coor dm|83|40|N|29|50|W}})<br>Various shifting [[gravel bar]]s lie further north, the most famous being [[Oodaaq]]</td> |
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Satellite measurements of ground temperature taken between 2003 and 2009, taken with the [[MODIS]] [[infrared]] spectroradiometer on the [[Aqua (satellite)|Aqua]] satellite, found a maximum temperature of 70.7 °C (159.3 °F), which was recorded in 2005 in the [[Lut Desert]], [[Iran]]. The Lut Desert was also found to have the highest maximum temperature in 5 of the 7 years measured (2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2009). These measurements reflect averages over a large region and so are lower than the maximum point surface temperature.<ref name=running2011 /> |
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<tr><th> Southernmost point on Earth</th><td>[[South Pole#Geographic South Pole|The geographic South Pole]]</td></tr> |
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</table> |
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Satellite measurements of the surface temperature of Antarctica, taken between 1982 and 2013, found a coldest temperature of −93.2 °C (−136 °F) on 10 August 2010, at {{Coord|81.8|S|59.3|E}}. Although this is not comparable to an air temperature, it is believed that the air temperature at this location would have been lower than the official record lowest air temperature of −89.2 °C.<ref>[https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-25287806 Coldest spot on Earth identified by satellite], Jonathan Amos, BBC News, 9 December 2013.</ref><ref>[http://fallmeeting.agu.org/2013/files/2013/12/ColdestPlaceOnEarth.pdf The Coldest Place on Earth: -90°C and below from Landsat 8 and other satellite thermal sensors], Ted Scambos, Allen Pope, Garrett Campbell, and Terry Haran, [[American Geophysical Union]] fall meeting, 9 December 2013.</ref> |
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==Extreme points by region== |
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===Afro-Eurasia=== |
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*[[Extreme points of Afro-Eurasia]] |
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**[[Extreme points of Africa|Africa]] |
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**::{{hlist|[[Geography of Algeria#Extreme points|Algeria]] |
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| [[Geography of Angola#Extreme points|Angola]] |
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| [[Geography of Benin#Extreme points|Benin]] |
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| [[Geography of Botswana#Extreme points|Botswana]] |
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| [[Geography of Burkina Faso#Extreme points|Burkina Faso]] |
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| [[Geography of Burundi#Extreme points|Burundi]] |
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| [[Geography of Cameroon#Extreme points|Cameroon]] |
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| [[Geography of Cape Verde#Extreme points|Cape Verde]] |
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| [[Geography of Central African Republic#Extreme points|Central African Republic]] |
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| [[Geography of Chad#Extreme points|Chad]] |
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| [[Geography of Comoros#Extreme points|Comoros]] |
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| [[Geography of the Democratic Republic of the Congo#Extreme points|Democratic Republic of the Congo]] |
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| [[Geography of the Republic of the Congo#Extreme points|Republic of Congo]] |
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| [[Geography of Côte d'Ivoire#Extreme points|Côte d'Ivoire]] |
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| [[Geography of Djibouti#Extreme points|Djibouti]] |
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| [[Geography of Egypt#Extreme points|Egypt]] |
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| [[Geography of Equatorial Guinea#Extreme points|Equatorial Guinea]] |
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| [[Geography of Eritrea#Extreme points|Eritrea]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Ethiopia|Ethiopia]] |
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| [[Geography of Gabon#Extreme points|Gabon]] |
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| [[Geography of the Gambia#Extreme points|Gambia]] |
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| [[Geography of Ghana#Extreme points|Ghana]] |
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| [[Geography of Guinea#Extreme points|Guinea]] |
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| [[Geography of Guinea-Bissau#Extreme points|Guinea-Bissau]] |
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| [[Geography of Kenya#Extreme points|Kenya]] |
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| [[Geography of Lesotho#Extreme points|Lesotho]] |
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| [[Geography of Liberia#Extreme points|Liberia]] |
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| [[Geography of Libya#Extreme points|Libya]] |
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| [[Geography of Madagascar#Extreme points|Madagascar]] |
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| [[Geography of Malawi#Extreme points|Malawi]] |
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| [[Geography of Mali#Extreme points|Mali]] |
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| [[Geography of Mauritania#Extreme points|Mauritania]] |
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| [[Geography of Mauritius#Extreme points|Mauritius]] |
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| [[Geography of Morocco#Extreme points|Morocco]] |
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| [[Geography of Mozambique#Extreme points|Mozambique]] |
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| [[Geography of Namibia#Extreme points|Namibia]] |
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| [[Geography of Niger#Extreme points|Niger]] |
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| [[Geography of Nigeria#Extreme points|Nigeria]] |
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| [[Geography of Rwanda#Extreme points|Rwanda]] |
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| [[Geography of São Tomé and Príncipe#Extreme points|São Tomé and Príncipe]] |
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| [[Geography of Senegal#Extreme points|Senegal]] |
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| [[Geography of Seychelles#Extreme points|Seychelles]] |
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| [[Geography of Sierra Leone#Extreme points|Sierra Leone]] |
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| [[Geography of Somalia#Extreme points|Somalia]] |
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| [[Geography of South Africa#Extreme points|South Africa]] |
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| [[Geography of Sudan#Extreme points|Sudan]] |
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| [[Geography of South Sudan#Extreme points|South Sudan]] |
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| [[Geography of Swaziland#Extreme points|Swaziland]] |
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| [[Geography of Tanzania#Extreme points|Tanzania]] |
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| [[Geography of Togo#Extreme points|Togo]] |
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| [[Geography of Tunisia#Extreme points|Tunisia]] |
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| [[Geography of Uganda#Extreme points|Uganda]] |
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| [[Geography of Western Sahara#Extreme points|Western Sahara]] |
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| [[Geography of Zambia#Extreme points|Zambia]] |
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| [[Geography of Zimbabwe#Extreme points|Zimbabwe]]}} |
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** [[Extreme points of Eurasia|Eurasia]] |
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***[[Extreme points of Asia|Asia]] |
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***:{{hlist| [[Geography of Afghanistan#Extreme points|Afghanistan]] |
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| [[Geography of Armenia#Extreme points|Armenia]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Azerbaijan|Azerbaijan]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Bangladesh|Bangladesh]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Bhutan|Bhutan]] |
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| [[Geography of Cambodia#Extreme points|Cambodia]] |
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| [[Extreme points of China|China]] |
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| [[Geography of Georgia (country)#Extreme points|Georgia]] |
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| [[Extreme points of India|India]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Indonesia|Indonesia]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Iran|Iran]] |
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| [[Geography of Israel#Extreme points|Israel]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Japan|Japan]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Jordan|Jordan]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Kazakhstan|Kazakhstan]] |
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| [[Geography of Kyrgyzstan#Extreme points|Kyrgyzstan]] |
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| [[Geography of Laos#Extreme points|Laos]] |
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| [[List of extreme points of Malaysia|Malaysia]] |
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| [[Geography of the Maldives#Extreme points|Maldives]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Mongolia|Mongolia]] |
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| [[Geography of Myanmar#Extreme points|Myanmar]] |
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| [[Geography of Nepal#Extreme points|Nepal]] |
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| [[Geography of North Korea#Extreme points|North Korea]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Pakistan|Pakistan]] |
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| [[Extreme points of the Philippines|Philippines]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Russia|Russia]] |
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| [[List of extreme points of Singapore|Singapore]] |
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| [[Extreme points of South Korea|South Korea]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Sri Lanka|Sri Lanka]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Taiwan|Taiwan]] |
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| [[Geography of Tajikistan#Extreme points|Tajikistan]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Thailand|Thailand]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Turkmenistan|Turkmenistan]] |
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| [[Geography of Uzbekistan#Extreme points|Uzbekistan]] |
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| [[Geography of Vietnam#Extreme points|Vietnam]] }} |
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***[[Extreme points of Europe|Europe]] |
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***: {{hlist| [[Extreme points of the European Union|European Union]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Albania|Albania]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Andorra|Andorra]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Austria|Austria]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Belarus|Belarus]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Belgium|Belgium]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Bosnia and Herzegovina|Bosnia and Herzegovina]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Bulgaria|Bulgaria]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Croatia|Croatia]] |
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| [[Extreme points of the Czech Republic|Czech Republic]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Denmark|Denmark]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Estonia|Estonia]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Finland|Finland]] |
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| [[Extreme points of France|France]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Germany|Germany]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Greece|Greece]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Hungary|Hungary]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Iceland|Iceland]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Ireland|Ireland]] |
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| [[List of extreme points of Italy|Italy]] |
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| [[Geography of Kosovo#Extreme points|Kosovo]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Latvia|Latvia]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Liechtenstein|Liechtenstein]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Lithuania|Lithuania]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Luxembourg|Luxembourg]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Malta|Malta]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Moldova|Moldova]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Monaco|Monaco]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Montenegro|Montenegro]] |
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| [[Extreme points of the Netherlands|Netherlands]] |
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| [[Extreme points of North Macedonia|North Macedonia]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Norway|Norway]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Poland|Poland]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Portugal|Portugal]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Romania|Romania]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Russia|Russia]] |
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| [[Extreme points of San Marino|San Marino]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Serbia|Serbia]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Slovakia|Slovakia]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Slovenia|Slovenia]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Spain|Spain]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Sweden|Sweden]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Switzerland|Switzerland]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Turkey|Turkey]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Ukraine|Ukraine]] |
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| [[Extreme points of the United Kingdom|United Kingdom]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Vatican City|Vatican City]] }} |
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===The Americas=== |
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*[[Extreme points of the Americas]] |
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**[[Extreme points of North America|North America]] |
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**::{{hlist| [[Extreme points of Canada|Canada]] <!-- |
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-->([[Extreme points of Canadian provinces|provinces]], <!-- |
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-->[[Extreme communities of Canada|communities]]) |
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| [[Extreme points of Greenland|Greenland]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Mexico|Mexico]] |
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| [[Extreme points of the United States|United States]] <!-- |
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-->([[Extreme points of U.S. states|states]], <!-- |
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-->[[Extreme points of New England|New England]]) }} |
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***[[Extreme points of Central America|Central America]] |
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***: {{hlist| [[Geography of Belize#Extreme points|Belize]] |
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| [[Geography of Costa Rica#Extreme points|Costa Rica]] |
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| [[Geography of El Salvador#Extreme points|El Salvador]] |
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| [[Geography of Guatemala#Extreme points|Guatemala]] |
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| [[Geography of Honduras#Extreme Points|Honduras]] |
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| [[Geography of Nicaragua#Extreme points|Nicaragua]] |
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| [[Geography of Panama#Extreme points|Panama]] }} |
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***[[Extreme points of the Caribbean|The Caribbean]] |
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***: {{hlist |[[Extreme points of Cuba|Cuba]] |
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| [[Geography of the Dominican Republic#Statistics|Dominican Republic]] |
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| [[Geography of Jamaica#Extreme points|Jamaica]] }} |
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**[[Extreme points of South America|South America]] |
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**:: {{hlist| [[Extreme points of Argentina|Argentina]] |
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| [[Geography of Bolivia#Extreme points|Bolivia]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Brazil|Brazil]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Chile|Chile]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Colombia|Colombia]] |
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| [[Geography of Ecuador#Extreme points|Ecuador]] |
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| [[Geography of French Guiana#Extreme points|French Guiana]] |
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| [[Geography of Guyana#Extreme points|Guyana]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Paraguay|Paraguay]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Peru|Peru]] |
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| [[Geography of Suriname#Extreme points|Suriname]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Uruguay|Uruguay]] |
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| [[Geography of Venezuela#Extreme points|Venezuela]] }} |
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===Oceania=== |
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*[[Extreme points of Oceania]] |
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*::: {{hlist| [[Extreme points of Australia|Australia]] |
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| [[Geography of Fiji#Extreme points|Fiji]] |
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| [[Geography of Guam#Extreme points|Guam]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Indonesia|Indonesia]] |
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| [[Geography of Kiribati#Extreme points|Kiribati]] |
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| [[Geography of the Marshall Islands#Extreme points|Marshall Islands]] |
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| [[Geography of Federated States of Micronesia#Extreme points|Micronesia]] |
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| [[Geography of Nauru#Extreme points|Nauru]] |
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| [[Extreme points of New Zealand|New Zealand]] |
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| [[Geography of Niue#Extreme points|Niue]] |
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| [[Extreme points of the Northern Mariana Islands|the Northern Mariana Islands]] |
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| [[Geography of Palau#Extreme points|Palau]] |
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| [[Extreme points of Papua New Guinea|Papua New Guinea]] |
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| [[Geography of Tuvalu#Extreme points|Tuvalu]] }} |
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===Antarctica=== |
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*[[Extreme points of Antarctica]] |
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===Arctic=== |
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*[[Extreme points of the Arctic]] |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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{{Portal|Earth sciences}} |
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* [[Extreme points of the world]] |
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{{div col|colwidth=30em}} |
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* [[The world's most northern]] |
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* [[Geographical centre]] |
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* [[The world's most southern]] |
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* [[Lists of extreme points]] |
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; Latitude and longitude |
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* [[List of northernmost items]] (city, capital, island, etc.) |
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* [[List of southernmost items]] (city, capital, island, etc.) |
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* [[List of countries by northernmost point]] |
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* [[List of countries by southernmost point]] |
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* [[Northernmost settlements]] |
* [[Northernmost settlements]] |
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* [[Southernmost settlements]] |
* [[Southernmost settlements]] |
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; Elevation |
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* [[List of elevation extremes by country]] |
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* [[List of elevation extremes by region]] |
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* [[List of highest towns by country]] |
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* [[Extreme points of the Commonwealth of Nations]] |
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; Geophysical features |
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* [[List of deepest caves]] |
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* [[Oceanic trench#Deepest oceanic trenches|List of deepest oceanic trenches]] |
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* [[List of deserts by area]] |
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* [[List of highest mountains on Earth]] |
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** [[List of volcanoes by elevation]] |
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* [[List of impact craters on Earth]] |
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* [[List of islands by area]] |
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* [[List of lakes by area]] |
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* [[List of lakes by depth]] |
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* [[List of rivers by length]] |
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* [[List of waterfalls by height]] |
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; Meteorology and climate |
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* [[List of weather records]] |
* [[List of weather records]] |
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; Beyond Earth |
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* [[List of Solar System extremes]] |
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* [[List of extrasolar planet extremes]] |
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{{div col end}} |
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== |
==Notes== |
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{{notelist}} |
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*[http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/globalextremes.html United States National Climatic Data Center] |
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*[http://home.comcast.net/~igpl/Extremes.html Extreme Geography] |
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*[http://www.mherrera.org/temp.htm Extreme Temperatures Around the World] |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{reflist|30em}} |
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<div class="references-small"><references/></div> |
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==External links== |
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[[Category:Mountains]] |
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20020927021958/http://www0.ncdc.noaa.gov/oa/climate/globalextremes.html United States National Climatic Data Center] |
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[[Category:Extreme points of the world| ]] |
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*[http://www.atoplists.com/awow-548 AWOW Top List World Top 10 Hottest Places] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171027074743/http://atoplists.com/awow-548 |date=27 October 2017 }} |
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[[Category:World records|Earth]] |
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{{records}} |
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<!--Interlanguage links--> |
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{{Earth}} |
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[[Category:Mountains]] |
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[[cs:Zeměpisné rekordy světa]] |
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[[Category:Extreme points of Earth| ]] |
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[[es:Extremos en la Tierra]] |
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[[Category:Weather extremes of Earth|Earth]] |
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[[pt:Extremos da Terra]] |
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[[Category:Lists of extreme points|*]] |
Latest revision as of 15:59, 18 December 2024
This article lists extreme locations on Earth that hold geographical records or are otherwise known for their geophysical or meteorological superlatives. All of these locations are Earth-wide extremes; extremes of individual continents or countries are not listed.
Latitude and longitude
[edit]Northernmost
[edit]- The northernmost point of land is the northern tip of Kaffeklubben Island, north of Greenland (83°40′N 29°50′W / 83.667°N 29.833°W), which lies slightly north of Cape Morris Jesup, Greenland (83°38′N 32°40′W / 83.633°N 32.667°W). Various shifting gravel bars lie farther north, the most famous being Oodaaq. There have been other islands more northern such as 83-42 and ATOW1996 but they have not been confirmed as permanent.
Southernmost
[edit]- The southernmost continental point of land outside Antarctica is in South America at Cape Froward, Magallanes Region, Chile (53°56′00″S 071°20′00″W / 53.93333°S 71.33333°W).
- The southernmost point of (liquid) water is a bay on the Filchner–Ronne Ice Shelf along the coast of Antarctica (83°S 59°W / 83°S 59°W)[citation needed], about 100 km (60 mi) south of Berkner Island.
- The southernmost point of ocean is located on the Gould Coast (84°30′S 150°0′W / 84.500°S 150.000°W).[citation needed][1]
- The southernmost point of open ocean is in the Bay of Whales, also part of the Ross Sea, at 78°30'S, at the edge of the Ross Ice Shelf.[2]
- The southernmost island is considered to be Deverall Island, near the Shackleton Coast, surrounded by the Ross Ice Shelf although there is an island in Lake Vostok but it is currently under ice.[3]
Easternmost and westernmost
[edit]- The easternmost and westernmost points on Earth, based on the east–west standard for describing longitude, can be found anywhere along the 180th meridian, which passes through the Arctic, Pacific, and Southern Oceans, as well as parts of Siberia (including Wrangel Island), Antarctica, and three islands of Fiji (Vanua Levu's eastern peninsula, the middle of Taveuni, and the western part of Rabi Island).
- Using instead the path of the International Date Line (which is not a straight line), the westernmost point on land is Attu Island, Alaska, and the easternmost point on land is Caroline Island, Kiribati.[a]
Longest grid lines
[edit]This section has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
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Along constant latitude
[edit]- The longest continuous east–west distance on land is 10,726 km (6,665 mi) along the latitude 48°24'53"N, from the west coast of France (Pointe de Corsen, 48°24′53″N 4°47′44″W / 48.41472°N 4.79556°W) through Central Europe, Ukraine, Russia, Kazakhstan, Mongolia and China, to a point on the east coast of Russia (48°24′53″N 140°6′3″E / 48.41472°N 140.10083°E).
- The longest continuous east–west distance at sea is 22,471 km (13,963 mi) along the latitude 55°59'S, south of Cape Horn, South America.
- The longest continuous east–west distance at sea between two continents is 15,409 km (9,575 mi) along the latitude 18°39'12"N, from the coast of Hainan, China (18°39′12″N 110°15′9″E / 18.65333°N 110.25250°E) across the Pacific Ocean to the coast of Michoacán, Mexico (18°39′12″N 103°42′6″W / 18.65333°N 103.70167°W).
Along constant longitude
[edit]- The longest continuous north–south distance on land is 7,590 km (4,720 mi) along the meridian 99°1'30"E, from the northern tip of Siberia in the Russian Federation (76°13′6″N 99°1′30″E / 76.21833°N 99.02500°E), through Mongolia, China, and Myanmar, to a point on the south coast of Thailand (7°53′24″N 99°1′30″E / 7.89000°N 99.02500°E).
- The longest in Africa is 7,417 km (4,609 mi) along the meridian 20°12'E, from the north coast of Libya (32°19′0″N 20°12′0″E / 32.31667°N 20.20000°E), through Chad, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Angola, Namibia, and Botswana, to the south coast of South Africa (34°41′30″S 20°12′0″E / 34.69167°S 20.20000°E).
- The longest in South America is the length 7,098 km (4,410 mi) along the meridian 70°2'W, from the north coast of Venezuela (11°30′30″N 70°2′0″W / 11.50833°N 70.03333°W), through Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Chile, to the southern tip of Argentina (52°33′30″S 70°2′0″W / 52.55833°S 70.03333°W).
- The longest in North America is 5,813 km (3,612 mi) along the meridian 97°52'30"W, from northern Canada (68°21′0″N 97°52′30″W / 68.35000°N 97.87500°W), through the United States, to southern Mexico (16°1′0″N 97°52′30″W / 16.01667°N 97.87500°W).
- The longest continuous north–south distance at sea is 15,986 km (9,933 mi) along the meridian 34°45'45"W, from the coast of Eastern Greenland (66°23′45″N 34°45′45″W / 66.39583°N 34.76250°W) across the Atlantic Ocean to the Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf, on the coast of Antarctica (77°37′0″S 34°45′45″W / 77.61667°S 34.76250°W). The longest in the Pacific Ocean is 15,883 km (9,869 mi) along the meridian 172°8'30"W, from the coast of Siberia (64°45′0″N 172°8′30″W / 64.75000°N 172.14167°W) to the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica (78°20′0″S 172°8′30″W / 78.33333°S 172.14167°W).
- The meridian that crosses the greatest total distance on land (disregarding intervening bodies of water) is still to be determined. It is likely located in the vicinity of 22°E, which is the longest integer meridian that fits that criterion, crossing a total of 13,035 km (8,100 mi) of land through Europe (3,370 km or 2,090 mi), Africa (7,458 km or 4,634 mi), and Antarctica (2,207 km or 1,371 mi).[b] More than 65% of this meridian's length is located on land. The next six longest integer meridians by total distance over land are, in order:
- 23°E: 12,953 km (8,049 mi) through Europe (3,325 km or 2,066 mi), Africa (7,415 km or 4,607 mi), and Antarctica (2,214 km or 1,376 mi)
- 27°E: 12,943 km (8,042 mi) through Europe (3,254 km or 2,022 mi), Asia (246 km or 153 mi), Africa (7,223 km or 4,488 mi), and Antarctica (2,221 km or 1,380 mi)
- 25°E: 12,875 km (8,000 mi) through Europe (3,344 km or 2,078 mi), Africa (7,327 km or 4,553 mi), and Antarctica (2,204 km or 1,370 mi)
- 26°E: 12,858 km (7,990 mi) through Europe (3,404 km or 2,115 mi), Africa (7,258 km or 4,510 mi), and Antarctica (2,196 km or 1,365 mi)
- 24°E: 12,794 km (7,950 mi) through Europe (3,263 km or 2,028 mi), Africa (7,346 km or 4,565 mi), and Antarctica (2,185 km or 1,358 mi)
- 28°E: 12,778 km (7,940 mi) through Europe (3,039 km or 1,888 mi), Asia (388 km or 241 mi), and Africa (7,117 km or 4,422 mi)
Along any geodesic
[edit]These are the longest straight lines[c] that can be drawn between any two points on the surface of the Earth and remain exclusively over land or water; the points need not lie on the same line of latitude or longitude.
- The longest continuous straight-line (great circle) path over land is 13,588 km (8,443 mi) long and spans between the West African coast near Greenville, Liberia (5°2′51.59″N 9°7′23.26″W / 5.0476639°N 9.1231278°W) and a peninsula about 100 km (60 mi) northeast of Wenzhou, China (28°17′7.68″N 121°38′17.31″E / 28.2854667°N 121.6381417°E), passing over the Suez Canal.[4]
- The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental Africa is 8,402 km (5,221 mi), along a line that begins just east of Tangier, Morocco, and ends 100 km (60 mi) east of Port Elizabeth, South Africa. This line passes through Morocco, Algeria, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Angola, Namibia, Botswana, and South Africa.[citation needed]
- The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental Asia is 10,152 km (6,308 mi), along a line that begins on the Indian coast near Kanyakumari and ends at the Bering Sea coast of the Chukchi Peninsula in Russia. This line passes through India, Nepal, China, Mongolia, and Russia.[citation needed]
- The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental Europe (defining the Ural Mountains as the border between Europe and Asia) is 5,325 km (3,309 mi), along a line that begins at Cape St. Vincent, Portugal, and ends at the Urals, near the town of Perm, Russia. This line passes through Portugal, Spain, France, Germany, Poland, Lithuania, Belarus, and Russia.[citation needed]
- The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental North America is 7,602 km (4,724 mi), along a line that begins at Point Hope, Alaska, United States, and ends 34 km (21 mi) southwest of the town of Salina Cruz, Mexico. This line passes through Alaska, Canada, the contiguous United States, and Mexico.[citation needed]
- The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental South America is 7,248 km (4,504 mi), along a line that begins 10 km (6.2 mi) northeast of Puerto Cumarebo, Venezuela, and ends 80 km (50 mi) south of the town of Punta Arenas, Chile. This line passes through Venezuela, Colombia, Brazil, Peru, Chile, and Argentina.[citation needed]
- The longest continuous straight-line land distance solely within continental Australia is 4,053 km (2,518 mi), along a line that begins at the southern end of Cape Range National Park in Western Australia and ends at the town of Byron Bay in New South Wales.[citation needed]
- There are several possible candidates for the longest continuous straight-line distance in any direction at sea, as there are many possible ways to travel along a great circle for more than the antipodic length of 19,840 km (12,330 mi). Some examples of such routes would be:
- From the south coast of Balochistan province somewhere near Port of Karachi, Pakistan (25°25′N 66°25′E / 25.417°N 66.417°E) across the Arabian Sea, southwest through the Indian Ocean, near Comoros, passing Namaete Canyon, near the South African coast, across the South Atlantic Ocean, then west across Cape Horn, then northwest across the Pacific Ocean, near Easter Island, passing the antipodal point near Emlilia island, through the South Bering Sea and ending somewhere on the northeast coast of Kamchatka, near Ossora (59°38′N 163°24′E / 59.633°N 163.400°E). This route is 32,040 km (19,910 mi) long.[5] This route was confirmed to be the longest (at about 32,090 km or 19,940 mi) given map data at a 1.8 km (1.1 mi) level of resolution.[6][7][d]
- From the south coast of Hormozgan province, Iran (25°35′N 58°22′E / 25.583°N 58.367°E) across the Gulf of Oman, southeast across the Arabian Sea, passing south of Australia and New Zealand, near the Antarctic coast, then northeast across the South Pacific Ocean, passing the antipodal point and ending on the southwest coast of Mexico somewhere near Ciudad Lázaro Cárdenas (17°57′N 101°57′W / 17.950°N 101.950°W). This route is 25,267 km (15,700 mi) long.[8]
- From Invercargill, New Zealand (46°37′S 168°59′E / 46.617°S 168.983°E) across Cape Horn, then off the coast of Brazil close to Recife, passing north of Cape Verde, passing the antipodal point and ending somewhere on the southwest coast of Ireland (52°09′N 6°34′W / 52.150°N 6.567°W). This route is 20,701 km (12,863 mi) long.[9]
Along any diameter (straight line passing through the centre of the Earth)
[edit]As distinct from geodesic lines, which appear straight only when projected onto the spheroidal surface of the Earth (i.e. arcs of great circles), straight lines passing through the Earth's centre can be constructed through the interior of the Earth between almost any two points on the surface of the Earth (some extreme topographical situations such as overhanging cliffs being the rare exceptions[citation needed]). A line projected from the summit of Cayambe in Ecuador (see highest points) through the axial centre of the Earth to its antipode on the island of Sumatra results in the longest diameter that can be produced anywhere through the Earth. As the variable circumference of the Earth approaches 40,000 kilometres (25,000 mi), such a maximum "diameter" or "antipodal" line would be on the order of 13,000 kilometres (8,000 mi) long.[citation needed]
Elevation
[edit]Highest points
[edit]- The highest point on Earth's surface measured from sea level is the summit of Mount Everest, on the border of Nepal and China. While measurements of its height vary slightly, the elevation of its peak was most recently established in 2020 by the Nepali and Chinese authorities as 8,848.86 m (29,031.7 ft) above sea level.[10] The summit was first reached probably by Sir Edmund Hillary of New Zealand and Tenzing Norgay Sherpa of Nepal in 1953.
- The point farthest from Earth's centre is the summit of Chimborazo[11] in Ecuador, at 6,384.4 km (3,967.1 mi) from Earth's centre; the peak's elevation relative to sea level is 6,263.47 m (20,549 ft).[e] Because Earth is an oblate spheroid rather than a perfect sphere, it is wider at the equator and narrower toward each pole. Therefore, the summit of Chimborazo, which is near the Equator, is farther away from Earth's centre than the summit of Mount Everest is; the latter is 2,168 m (7,112.9 ft) closer, at 6,382.3 km (3,965.8 mi) from Earth's centre. Peru's Huascarán (at 6,384.4 m or 20,946 ft) contends closely with Chimborazo, though the former is a mere 10 m (33 ft) closer to the Earth's centre.
- The fastest point on Earth or, in other words, the point farthest from Earth's rotational axis is the summit of Cayambe[13] in Ecuador, which rotates around Earth's axis at a speed of 1,675.89 km/h (1,041.35 mph) and is 6,383.95 km (3,966.80 mi) from the axis. Like Chimborazo, which is the fourth-fastest peak at 1,675.47 km/h (1,041.09 mph), Cayambe is close to the Equator and takes advantage of the oblate spheroid figure of Earth. More important, however, Cayambe's proximity to the Equator means that the majority of its distance from the Earth's centre contributes to Cayambe's distance from the Earth's axis.
Highest geographical features
[edit]- The highest volcano is Ojos del Salado on the Argentina–Chile border. It has the highest summit, 6,893 m (22,615 ft), of any volcano on Earth.
- The highest natural lake is an unnamed crater lake on Ojos del Salado at 6,390 m (20,965 ft),[14] on the Argentina side. Another candidate was Lhagba Pool on the northeast slopes of Mount Everest, Tibet, at an elevation of 6,368 m (20,892 ft), which has since dried up.[15]
- The highest navigable lake is Lake Titicaca, on the border of Bolivia and Peru in the Andes, at 3,812 m (12,507 ft).
- The highest glacier is the Khumbu Glacier on the southwest slopes of Mount Everest in Nepal, beginning on the west side of Lhotse at an elevation of 7,600 to 8,000 m (24,900 to 26,200 ft).[16]
- The highest river is disputed; one candidate from many possibilities is the Ating Ho, which flows into the Aong Tso (Hagung Tso), a large lake in Tibet, and has an elevation of about 6,100 m (20,013 ft) at its source at 32°49′30″N 81°03′45″E / 32.82500°N 81.06250°E. Another very large and high river is the Yarlung Tsangpo or upper Brahmaputra River in Tibet, whose main stem, the Maquan River, has its source at about 6,020 m (19,751 ft) above sea level at 30°48′59″N 82°42′45″E / 30.81639°N 82.71250°E.[17] Above these elevations, there are no constantly flowing rivers since the temperature is almost always below freezing.
- The highest island is one of a number of islands in the Orba Co lake in Tibet, at an elevation of 5,209 m (17,090 ft).[18]
Highest points attainable by transportation
[edit]- The highest point accessible
- by land vehicle is an elevation of 6,688 m (21,942 ft) on Ojos del Salado in Chile, which was reached by the Chilean duo of Gonzalo and Eduardo Canales Moya on 21 April 2007 with a modified Suzuki Samurai, setting the high-altitude record for a four-wheeled vehicle.
- by road (dead end) is on a mining road to the summit of Aucanquilcha in Chile, which reaches an elevation of 6,176 m (20,262 ft). It was once usable by 20-tonne mining trucks.[19] The road is no longer usable. 21°12′50″S 68°28′30″W / 21.214°S 68.475°W
- by road (mountain pass) is disputed; there are a number of competing claims for this title due to the definition of "motorable pass" (i.e. a surfaced road or one simply passable by a vehicle):
- The highest asphalted road is the single-lane road to Umling La, located 17 km (11 mi) west of Demchok in Ladakh, India, which reaches 5,800 m (19,029 ft) ("19,300 feet" according to a Border Roads Organisation sign there that recognizes it as the "World's Highest Motorable Pass").[20][21] Before the asphalting of the road over Umling La, the highest asphalted road was Tibet's Semo La pass at 5,565 m (18,258 ft). It is used by trucks and buses regularly.[22] The Ticlio pass, on the Central Road of Peru, is the highest surfaced road in the Americas, at an elevation of 4,818 m (15,807 ft).
- The highest unsurfaced road has several different claimants. All are unsurfaced or gravel roads including Mana Pass, between India and Tibet, which is crossed by a gravel road reaching 5,610 m (18,406 ft). The heavily trafficked Khardung La in Ladakh lies at 5,359 m (17,582 ft). A possibly motorable gravel road crosses Marsimik La in Ladakh at 5,582 m (18,314 ft).
- by train is Tanggula Pass, located on the Qinghai–Tibet (Qingzang) Railway in the Tanggula Mountains of Qinghai/Tibet, China, at 5,072 m (16,640 ft). The Tanggula railway station is the world's highest railway station at 5,068 m (16,627 ft). Before the Qingzang Railway was built, the highest railway ran between Lima and Huancayo in Peru, reaching 4,829 m (15,843 ft) at Ticlio.[23]
- by oceangoing vessel is a segment of the Rhine–Main–Danube Canal between the Hilpoltstein and Bachhausen locks in Bavaria, Germany. The locks artificially raise the surface level of the water in the canal to 406 m (1,332 ft) above mean sea level, higher than any other lock system in the world, making it the highest point currently accessible by oceangoing commercial watercraft.
- The highest commercial airport is Daocheng Yading Airport, Sichuan, China, at 4,411 m (14,472 ft).[24] The proposed Nagqu Dagring Airport in Tibet, if built, will be 25 m (82 ft) higher at 4,436 m (14,554 ft).
- The highest helipad is Sonam, Siachen Glacier, India, at a height of 6,400 m (20,997 ft) above sea level.[25]
- The highest permanent human settlement is La Rinconada, Peru, 5,100 m (16,732 ft), in the Peruvian Andes.
- The farthest road from the Earth's centre is the Road to Carrel Hut in the Ecuadorian Andes, at an elevation of 4,850 m (15,912 ft) above sea level and a distance of 6,382.9 km (3,966 mi) from the centre of the Earth.[26]
Lowest points
[edit]Lowest natural points
[edit]- The deepest point below the ocean's atmospheric surface is Challenger Deep, at the bottom of the Mariana Trench, 11,034 m (36,201 ft) below sea level.[27] Jacques Piccard and U.S. Navy Lieutenant Don Walsh first reached Challenger Deep in 1960 aboard the bathyscaphe Trieste, followed by filmmaker James Cameron in 2012 aboard Deepsea Challenger. Between 2020 and 2022, DSV Limiting Factor made 19 dives to Challenger Deep, carrying with it 19 further visitors.[28][29]
- The deepest known cave is in the Veryovkina Cave in Georgia, where the altitude difference between the cave's entrance and the deepest explored point (the maximum depth) is 2,209 meters (7,247 ft), reached in 2019 by a Perovo-speleo team and re-measured more precisely in 2024.[30][31]
- The lowest point on land not covered by liquid water is the canyon under Denman Glacier in Antarctica, with the bedrock being 3,500 m (11,500 ft) below sea level.[32][33]
- The lowest point on dry land is the shore of the Dead Sea, shared by Israel, Palestine and Jordan, 432.65 m (1,419 ft) below sea level. As the Dead Sea waters are receding, the water surface level drops more than 1 metre (3.3 ft) per year.[34]
- The point on the atmospheric surface closest to the Earth's centre (interpreted as a natural surface of the land or sea that is accessible by a person) is the surface of the Arctic Ocean at the Geographic North Pole (6,356.77 km or 3,950 mi).
- The point on the surface of Earth's crust closest to the Earth's centre (interpreted as a land surface or sea floor) is the bottom of Litke Deep, in the Arctic Ocean, at 6,351.7043 km (3,947 mi) from Earth's centre; the deep's depth relative to sea level is 5,449 m (17,877 ft). Because Earth is an oblate spheroid rather than a perfect sphere, it is wider at the equator and narrower toward each pole. Therefore, the bottom of Litke Deep, which is near the North Pole, is closer to Earth's centre than the bottom of Challenger Deep is; the latter is 14.7268 km (48,316.3 ft) further, at 6,366.4311 km (3,955.9 mi) from Earth's centre.[35] Molloy Deep, also in Arctic Ocean (at 6,357.5178 km or 3,950 mi) from Earth's centre contends closely with Litke Deep, the difference from Earth's centre being just 389 m (1,276 ft).
- The point on the ocean surface farthest below sea level is located in the Indian Ocean, about 1,200 km (750 mi) southwest of India, the Indian Ocean Geoid Low, about 106 m (348 ft) below the global mean sea level.[36]
Lowest artificial points
[edit]- The lowest point underground ever reached was 12,262 m (40,230 ft) deep (SG-3 at the Kola Superdeep Borehole, which has since been enclosed).
- The lowest human-sized point underground is 3,900 m (12,800 ft)[37] below ground at the TauTona Mine, Carletonville, South Africa.
- The lowest (from sea level) artificially made point with open sky may be the Hambach surface mine, Germany, which reaches a depth of 293 m (961 ft) below sea level.
- The lowest (from surface) artificially made point with open sky may be the Bingham Canyon Open Pit Copper Mine, Utah, United States, at a depth of 1,200 m (3,900 ft) below surface level.
- The lowest point underwater is the 10,685 m (35,056 ft)-deep (as measured from the subsea wellhead) oil and gas well drilled on the Tiber Oil Field in the Gulf of Mexico. The wellhead of this well is an additional 1,259 m (4,131 ft) underwater, for a total distance of 11,944 m (39,186 ft) as measured from sea level.[38] 28°44′12″N 88°23′13″W / 28.736667°N 88.386944°W
Lowest points attainable by transportation
[edit]- The lowest point accessible:
- by road, excluding roads in mines, is any of the roads alongside the Dead Sea in Israel, Palestine and Jordan, which are the lowest on Earth at 418 m (1,371 ft) below sea level.
- by train, excluding tracks in mines, is located in the Seikan Tunnel in Japan, at 240 m (787 ft) below sea level. For comparison, the undersea Channel Tunnel between England and France reaches a depth of 115 m (377 ft) below sea level.
- by ship, is located in the Indian Ocean, about 1,200 km (750 mi) southwest of India, the Indian Ocean Geoid Low, about 106 m (348 ft) below the global mean sea level.[36]
- Some mines have roads accessible from outside or rail tracks, located more than two thousand metres below sea level, for example in some South African gold mines.
- The lowest railroad station was formerly the Japanese Yoshioka-Kaitei Station, at 150 m (492 ft) below sea level, but it closed in 2014. The lowest railroad station not inside a tunnel is 120 m (394 ft) below sea level, at Beit She'an railway station in Israel.[citation needed]
- The lowest airfield is the Bar Yehuda Airfield, near Masada, Israel, at 378 m (1,240 ft) below sea level.
- The lowest international airport is Atyrau Airport, near Atyrau, Kazakhstan, at 22 m (72 ft) below sea level, in the basin of the Caspian Sea.
- The lowest major city is Baku, Azerbaijan, located 28 m (92 ft) below sea level, which makes it the lowest-lying national capital in the world and also the largest city in the world located below sea level.
Table of extreme elevations and air temperatures by continent
[edit]Continent | Elevation (height above/below sea level)A | Air temperature (recorded)[39]B | |||
Highest | Lowest | Highest | Lowest | ||
Africa | 5,893 m (19,334 feet) Kilimanjaro, Tanzania[40] |
−155 m (−509 feet) Lake Assal, Djibouti[41] |
55 °C (131 °F) (disputed[42]) Kebili, French Tunisia 7 July 1931C |
−23.9 °C (−11.0 °F) Ifrane, French Morocco 11 February 1935 | |
Antarctica | 4,892 m (16,050 feet) Vinson Massif[43] |
−50 m (−164 feet)[44] Deep Lake, Vestfold Hills (compare the deepest ice section below) |
20.75 °C (69.35 °F) Comandante Ferraz Antarctic Station 9 February 2020 |
−89.2 °C (−128.6 °F) Vostok Station 21 July 1983 | |
Asia | 8,848.86 m (29,032 feet) Mount Everest, Tibet–Nepal Border [45] |
−424 m (−1,391 feet) Dead Sea, Israel–Jordan–Palestine[46] |
54 °C (129 °F) Tirat Zvi, Israel (then in the British Mandate of Palestine) 21 June 1942 |
−67.7 °C (−89.9 °F) Measured Oymyakon, Siberia, Soviet Union 6 February 1933[47][48] | |
54 °C (129 °F) Ahvaz Airport, Iran 29 June 2017[49] |
−71.2 °C (−96.2 °F) Extrapolated Oymyakon, Siberia, Soviet Union 26 January 1926[50] | ||||
Europe | 5,642 m (18,510 feet) Mount Elbrus, Russian Federation[51] |
−28 m (−92 feet) Caspian Sea shore, Russian Federation[52] |
48.8 °C | −58.1 °C (−72.6 °F) Ust-Shchuger, Soviet Union 31 December 1978 | |
North America | 6,190.5 m (20,310 feet) Denali, Alaska, United States[53] |
−85 m (−279 feet) Badwater Basin, California, United States[54] |
56.7 °C (134.1 °F) Furnace Creek (then named Greenland Ranch), Death Valley, California, United States 10 July 1913C (disputed while still official, but up to 54.4 °C (129.9 °F)[42] has also been recorded there in 2020 and 2021, not yet verified by WMO; and 54.0 °C (129.2 °F) which is verified.) |
-69.6 °C (-93.3 °F)
Summit Camp, Greenland | |
Oceania | 4,884 m (16,024 feet) Puncak Jaya (Carstensz Pyramid), Indonesia (compare Mount Wilhelm, Aoraki / Mount Cook and Mount Kosciuszko)[55] |
−15 m (−49 feet) Lake Eyre, South Australia, Australia[56] |
50.7 °C (123.3 °F) Oodnadatta, South Australia, Australia 2 January 1960G 50.7 °C (123.3 °F) 13 January 2022[57] |
−25.6 °C (−14.1 °F) Ranfurly, Otago, New Zealand 17 July 1903 | |
South America | 6,962 m (22,841 feet) Aconcagua, Mendoza, Argentina[58] |
−105 m (−344 feet) Laguna del Carbón, Argentina[59] |
48.9 °C (120.0 °F) Rivadavia, Salta Province, Argentina 11 December 1905 |
−32.8 °C (−27.0 °F) Sarmiento, Chubut Province, Argentina 1 June 1907 | |
|
Humans and biogeography
[edit]In contrast to places with the highest density of life, like terrestrial[66] tropical regions, and beside local extreme conditions, which might only be overcome by extremophiles, there are areas of extreme low amounts of life.
Next to terrestrial lifeless areas like the Antarctic desert's McMurdo Dry Valleys and its Don Juan Pond, the most lifeless area in the ocean studied (other than the more general dead zones) is the South Pacific Gyre,[67] corresponding to the oceanic pole of inaccessibility.
The oceanic pole of inaccessibility is also the antipodal area of the human center of population which lies today around southern Central Asia. Similarly the world's economic center of gravity has been drifting since antiquity from Central Asia to Northern Europe and contemporarily back to Central Asia.[68] The related centre of gravity of the worlds carbon emission has shifted from Britain during the Industrial Revolution to the Atlantic, back again and contemporarily into Central Asia.[69]
Remoteness
[edit]Poles of inaccessibility
[edit]Each continent has its own continental pole of inaccessibility, defined as the place on the continent that is farthest from any ocean. Similarly, each ocean has its own oceanic pole of inaccessibility, defined as the place in the ocean that is farthest from any land.
Continental
[edit]- The most distant point from an ocean is the Eurasian Pole of Inaccessibility (or "EPIA") 46°17′N 86°40′E / 46.283°N 86.667°E, in China's Xinjiang region near the border with Kazakhstan. Calculations have shown that this point, located in the Dzoosotoyn Elisen Desert, is 2,645 km (1,644 mi) from the nearest coastline. The nearest settlement to the EPIA is Suluk at 46°15′N 86°50′E / 46.250°N 86.833°E, about 11 km (7 mi) to the east.[citation needed] A 2007 study suggests that the historical calculation of the EPIA failed to recognize the point where the Gulf of Ob joins the Arctic Ocean, and proposes instead that varying definitions of coastline could result in other locations for the EPIA:
- EPIA1, somewhere between 44°17′N 82°11′E / 44.283°N 82.183°E and 44°29′N 82°19′E / 44.483°N 82.317°E, is about 2,510 ± 10 km (1,559.6 ± 6.2 mi) from the nearest ocean.
- EPIA2, somewhere between 45°17′N 88°08′E / 45.283°N 88.133°E and 45°28′N 88°14′E / 45.467°N 88.233°E, is about 2,514 ± 7 km (1,562.1 ± 4.3 mi) from the nearest ocean.[71]
- If adopted, this would place the final EPIA roughly 130 km (80 mi) closer to the ocean than the point that is currently agreed upon.[71] Coincidentally, EPIA1, or EPIA2, and the most remote of the Oceanic Pole of Inaccessibility (specifically, the point in the South Pacific Ocean that is farthest from land) are similarly remote; EPIA1 is less than 200 km (120 mi) closer to the ocean than the Oceanic Pole of Inaccessibility is to land.
- The continental poles of inaccessibility for the other continents are as follows:
- Africa: 5°39′N 26°10′E / 5.65°N 26.17°E,[71] close to the tripoint of the Central African Republic, South Sudan, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Australia: either 23°2′S 132°10′E / 23.033°S 132.167°E,[72] or 23°10′S 132°16′E / 23.17°S 132.27°E,[71] near Papunya, Northern Territory
- North America: 43°22′N 101°58′W / 43.36°N 101.97°W,[71] between Kyle, South Dakota and Allen, South Dakota, United States.
- South America: 14°03′S 56°51′W / 14.05°S 56.85°W,[71] near Arenápolis, Mato Grosso, Brazil
Oceanic
[edit]- The most distant point from land is the Pacific pole of inaccessibility (also called "Point Nemo", in a region known as the spacecraft cemetery), which lies in the South Pacific Ocean at 48°52.6′S 123°23.6′W / 48.8767°S 123.3933°W, about 2,688 km (1,670 mi) from the nearest land (equidistant from Ducie Island in the Pitcairn Islands to the north, Motu Nui off Rapa Nui to the northeast, and Maher Island off Siple Island near Marie Byrd Land, Antarctica, to the south).[73] The centre of the Pacific Ocean and the Water Hemisphere lie west to it, closer to Oceania, off the coast of Kiribati at 47°24′42″N 2°37′15″W / 47.411667°N 2.620833°W and New Zealand at 47°24′42″S 177°22′45″E / 47.411667°S 177.379167°E respectively.
Other places considered the most remote
[edit]- The most remote island is Bouvet Island, a small, uninhabited island in the South Atlantic Ocean that is a dependency of Norway. It lies at coordinates 54°26′S 3°24′E / 54.433°S 3.400°E. The nearest land is the uninhabited Queen Maud Land, Antarctica (also claimed by Norway), over 1,600 km (1,000 mi) to the south. The nearest inhabited lands are Gough Island, 1,845 km (1,146 mi) away, Tristan da Cunha, 2,260 km (1,404 mi) away, and the coast of South Africa, 2,580 km (1,603 mi) away.
- The title for most remote inhabited island or archipelago (the farthest away from any other permanently inhabited place) depends on how the question is interpreted. If the south Atlantic island Tristan da Cunha (population about 300) and its dependency Gough Island (with a small staffed research post), which are 399 km (248 mi) from each other, are considered part of the same archipelago, or if Gough Island is not counted because it has no permanent residents, then Tristan da Cunha is the world's most remote inhabited island/archipelago: the main island, also called Tristan da Cunha, is 2,434 km (1,512 mi) from the island Saint Helena, 2,816 km (1,750 mi) from South Africa, and 3,360 km (2,090 mi) from South America. It is 2,260 km (1,404 mi) away from uninhabited Bouvet Island. However, if Gough and Tristan da Cunha are considered separately, they disqualify each other, and the most remote inhabited island is Easter Island in the South Pacific Ocean, which lies 2,075 km (1,289 mi) from Pitcairn Island (about 50 residents in 2013), 2,606 km (1,619 mi) from Rikitea on the island of Mangareva (the nearest town with a population over 500), and 3,512 km (2,182 mi) from the coast of Chile (the nearest continental point and the country of which Easter Island is part). The Kerguelen Islands in the southern Indian Ocean are another contender, lying 1,340 km (830 mi) from the small Alfred Faure scientific station in Île de la Possession, but otherwise more than 3,300 km (2,100 mi) from the coast of Madagascar (the nearest permanently inhabited place), 450 km (280 mi) northwest of the uninhabited Heard Island and McDonald Islands (both a part of Australia), and 1,440 km (890 mi) from the non-permanent scientific station located in Île Amsterdam.
- Remote cities
- The most remote city with a population in excess of one million from the nearest city with a population in excess of one million is Auckland, New Zealand. The nearest city of comparable size or greater is Sydney, Australia, 2,168.9 km (1,347.7 mi) away.[74]
- The most remote city with a population in excess of one million from the nearest city with a population above 100,000 is Perth, Australia, located 2,138 km (1,328 mi)[75] away from Adelaide, Australia.
- The most remote city with a population in excess of 100,000 from the nearest city with a population in excess of 100,000 is Honolulu, Hawaii, United States. The nearest city of comparable size or greater is San Francisco, 3,850 km (2,390 mi) away.[76]
- The most remote national capitals are Wellington, New Zealand, and Canberra, Australia, which are 2,326 km (1,445 mi) apart from each other and neither is closer to another capital.
- The most remote airport in the world from another airport is Mataveri International Airport (IPC) on Easter Island, which has a single runway for military and public use. It is located 2,603 km (1,617 mi) from Totegegie Airport (GMR; very few flights) in the Gambier Islands, French Polynesia and 3,759 km (2,336 mi) from Santiago, Chile (SCL; a fairly large airport). In comparison, the airport at the Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station (NZSP) is not very remote at all, being located only 1,355 km (842 mi) from Williams Field (NZWD) near Ross Island.[77]
Farthest-apart cities
[edit]The pairs of cities (with a population over 100,000) with the greatest distance between them (antipodes) are:[78]
- Xinghua, China to Rosario, Argentina: 19,996 km (12,425 mi)[79]
- Lu'an, China to Río Cuarto, Argentina: 19,994 km (12,424 mi)[80]
- Subang Jaya, Malaysia to Cuenca, Ecuador: 19,989 km (12,421 mi)[81]
- Shanghai, China to Concordia, Argentina: 19,984 km (12,417 mi)[82]
- Xi'an, China to Rancagua, Chile: 19,972 km (12,410 mi)[83]
- Rui'an, China to Resistencia, Argentina: 19,967 km (12,407 mi)[84]
- Yantai, China to Tandil, Argentina: 19,965 km (12,406 mi)[85]
- Lichuan, China to Coquimbo, Chile: 19,964 km (12,405 mi)[86]
- Bandung, Indonesia to Piedecuesta, Colombia: 19,962 km (12,404 mi)[87]
- Salamanca, Spain to Lower Hutt, New Zealand: 19,961 km (12,403 mi)[88]
The pair of airports with scheduled flights having the greatest distance between them are Sultan Mahmud Badaruddin II International Airport, which serves Palembang, Indonesia, and Benito Salas Airport, which serves Neiva, Colombia, located about 10,819 nautical miles (20,037 km) apart.[89] See longest flights for the longest non-stop flights.
Centre
[edit]Since the Earth is a spheroid, its centre (the core) is thousands of kilometres beneath its crust. Still, there have been attempts to define various "centrepoints" on the Earth's surface.
- The centre of the standard geographic model as viewed on a traditional world map is the point 0°, 0° (the coordinates of zero degrees latitude by zero degrees longitude), which is located in the Atlantic Ocean about 614 km (382 mi) south of Accra, Ghana, in the Gulf of Guinea. It lies at the intersection of the Equator and the Prime Meridian, is marked with a buoy, and is sometimes called Null Island. However, the selection of the Prime Meridian as the 0° longitude meridian depended on cultural and historical factors and is therefore geographically arbitrary (any of the Earth's meridians could, in principle, be defined as 0° longitude); consequently, the position of the "Null Island" centrepoint is also arbitrary.
- The centre of population, the place to which there is the shortest average route for every individual human being in the world, could also be considered a "centre of the world". This point is located in the north of the Indian subcontinent, although the precise location has never been calculated and is constantly shifting due to changes in the distribution of the human population across the planet.
Geophysical extremes
[edit]Tallest mountain
[edit]- Mauna Kea, tallest mountain from base-to-peak, with a dry prominence of 9,330 m (30,610 ft) and a wet prominence above sea level of 4,207.3 m (13,803 ft).
- Denali, tallest mountain from base-to-peak on land, measuring 5,500 m (18,000 ft).[90]
Greatest vertical drop
[edit]Greatest purely vertical drop | 1,200 m (4,100 ft) Mount Thor, Auyuittuq National Park, Baffin Island, Nunavut, Canada (summit elevation 1,675 m (5,495 ft))[91][92] |
|
Greatest nearly vertical drop | 1,340 m (4,396 ft) Trango Towers, Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan (summit elevation 6,286 m (20,623 ft)) |
|
Greatest mountain face | 4,600 m (15,092 ft) Nanga Parbat, Rupal Face, Azad Kashmir, Pakistan |
|
Greatest ocean cliff | Kermadec Trench, with cliffs around 8,000 m (26,000 ft) tall |
Subterranean
[edit]Deepest mine below ground level | 4,000 m (13,000 ft) Mponeng Gold Mine, Gauteng Province, South Africa |
Deepest mine below sea level | 2,733 m (8,967 ft) below sea level Kidd Mine, Ontario, Canada |
Deepest open-pit mine below ground level | 1,200 m (3,900 ft) Bingham Canyon Mine, Utah, United States |
Deepest open-pit mine below sea level | 293 m (961 ft) below sea level Tagebau Hambach, Germany |
Deepest cave (measured from the entrance) | 2,204 m (7,231 ft) Veryovkina, Arabika Massif, Abkhazia, Georgia[93] |
Deepest pitch (single vertical drop) | 1,026 m (3,366 ft) Tian Xing Cave, China[94] |
Deepest borehole | 12,261 m (40,226 ft) Kola Superdeep Borehole, Russia[95] |
Deepest borehole by depth below sea level | 11,944 m (39,186 ft) (10,685 m well at 1,259 m deep seabed) The Tiber well, Gulf of Mexico, United States [96] |
Greatest oceanic depths
[edit]Atlantic Ocean | 8,376 m (27,480 ft)[97] Milwaukee Deep (within the Brownson Deep), Puerto Rico Trench |
Arctic Ocean | 5,550 m (18,209 ft)[98] Molloy Deep, Fram Strait |
Indian Ocean | 7,192 m (23,596 ft)[99] Sunda Trench |
Mediterranean Sea | 5,267 m (17,280 ft) Calypso Deep, Hellenic Trench |
Pacific Ocean | 10,928 m (35,853 ft)[100] Challenger Deep, Mariana Trench[101] |
Southern Ocean | 7,433.6 m (24,388 ft)[102] South Sandwich Trench (southernmost portion, at 60°28.46′S 025°32.32′W / 60.47433°S 25.53867°W) |
Deepest ice
[edit]Ice sheets on land, but having the base below sea level. Places under ice are not considered to be on land.
Denman Subglacial Trench | −3,500 m (−11,500 ft) | Antarctica |
Trough beneath Jakobshavn Isbræ | −1,512 m (−4,961 ft)[103] | Greenland, Denmark |
Meteorological extremes
[edit]Coldest and hottest inhabited places on Earth
[edit]Hottest inhabited place | Dallol, Ethiopia (Amharic: ዳሎል), whose annual mean temperature was recorded from 1960 to 1966 as 34.4 °C (93.9 °F).[104] The average daily maximum temperature during the same period was 41.1 °C (106.0 °F).[105] |
Coldest inhabited place | Oymyakon (Russian: Оймяко́н), a rural locality (selo) in Oymyakonsky District of the Sakha Republic, the Russian Federation, has the coldest monthly mean, with −46.4 °C (−51.5 °F) the average temperature in January, the coldest month. Eureka, Nunavut, Canada has the lowest annual mean temperature at −19.7 °C (−3.5 °F).[106] |
The South Pole and some other places in Antarctica are colder and are populated year-round, but almost everyone stays less than a year and could be considered visitors, not inhabitants. |
Ground temperatures
[edit]Temperatures measured directly on the ground may exceed air temperatures by 30 to 50 °C.[107] A ground temperature of 84 °C (183.2 °F) has been recorded in Port Sudan, Sudan.[108] A ground temperature of 93.9 °C (201 °F) was recorded in Furnace Creek, Death Valley, California, United States on 15 July 1972; this may be the highest natural ground surface temperature ever recorded.[109] The theoretical maximum possible ground surface temperature has been estimated to be between 90 and 100 °C for dry, darkish soils of low thermal conductivity.[110]
Satellite measurements of ground temperature taken between 2003 and 2009, taken with the MODIS infrared spectroradiometer on the Aqua satellite, found a maximum temperature of 70.7 °C (159.3 °F), which was recorded in 2005 in the Lut Desert, Iran. The Lut Desert was also found to have the highest maximum temperature in 5 of the 7 years measured (2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2009). These measurements reflect averages over a large region and so are lower than the maximum point surface temperature.[107]
Satellite measurements of the surface temperature of Antarctica, taken between 1982 and 2013, found a coldest temperature of −93.2 °C (−136 °F) on 10 August 2010, at 81°48′S 59°18′E / 81.8°S 59.3°E. Although this is not comparable to an air temperature, it is believed that the air temperature at this location would have been lower than the official record lowest air temperature of −89.2 °C.[111][112]
Extreme points by region
[edit]Afro-Eurasia
[edit]- Extreme points of Afro-Eurasia
- Africa
- Algeria
- Angola
- Benin
- Botswana
- Burkina Faso
- Burundi
- Cameroon
- Cape Verde
- Central African Republic
- Chad
- Comoros
- Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Republic of Congo
- Côte d'Ivoire
- Djibouti
- Egypt
- Equatorial Guinea
- Eritrea
- Ethiopia
- Gabon
- Gambia
- Ghana
- Guinea
- Guinea-Bissau
- Kenya
- Lesotho
- Liberia
- Libya
- Madagascar
- Malawi
- Mali
- Mauritania
- Mauritius
- Morocco
- Mozambique
- Namibia
- Niger
- Nigeria
- Rwanda
- São Tomé and Príncipe
- Senegal
- Seychelles
- Sierra Leone
- Somalia
- South Africa
- Sudan
- South Sudan
- Swaziland
- Tanzania
- Togo
- Tunisia
- Uganda
- Western Sahara
- Zambia
- Zimbabwe
- Eurasia
- Asia
- Europe
- European Union
- Albania
- Andorra
- Austria
- Belarus
- Belgium
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Bulgaria
- Croatia
- Czech Republic
- Denmark
- Estonia
- Finland
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- Hungary
- Iceland
- Ireland
- Italy
- Kosovo
- Latvia
- Liechtenstein
- Lithuania
- Luxembourg
- Malta
- Moldova
- Monaco
- Montenegro
- Netherlands
- North Macedonia
- Norway
- Poland
- Portugal
- Romania
- Russia
- San Marino
- Serbia
- Slovakia
- Slovenia
- Spain
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- Turkey
- Ukraine
- United Kingdom
- Vatican City
- Asia
- Africa
The Americas
[edit]Oceania
[edit]Antarctica
[edit]Arctic
[edit]See also
[edit]- Latitude and longitude
- List of northernmost items (city, capital, island, etc.)
- List of southernmost items (city, capital, island, etc.)
- List of countries by northernmost point
- List of countries by southernmost point
- Northernmost settlements
- Southernmost settlements
- Elevation
- List of elevation extremes by country
- List of elevation extremes by region
- List of highest towns by country
- Extreme points of the Commonwealth of Nations
- Geophysical features
- List of deepest caves
- List of deepest oceanic trenches
- List of deserts by area
- List of highest mountains on Earth
- List of impact craters on Earth
- List of islands by area
- List of lakes by area
- List of lakes by depth
- List of rivers by length
- List of waterfalls by height
- Meteorology and climate
- Beyond Earth
Notes
[edit]- ^ A 1995 realignment of the International Date Line Archived 28 June 2006 at the Wayback Machine moved all of Kiribati to the Asian side of the Date Line, causing Caroline Island to be the easternmost point. If the previous Date Line were followed, the easternmost point would be Tafahi Niuatoputapu, in the Tonga Islands.
- ^ By comparison, the meridian that passes through the Great Pyramid of Giza in Egypt (31°08'3.69"E) is 855 km (531 mi) shorter.
- ^ A geodesic is defined as the shortest route between any two points on the surface of the Earth, as measured along the surface of the Earth (rather than through the Earth's interior); they are "straight lines" only in the sense that they are plotted on an idealized two-dimensional surface of the three-dimensional Earth, neglecting changes in surface elevation. On an idealized spherical model of the Earth, geodesics are equivalent to great-circle distances measured along the arcs of great circles.
- ^ The "longest continuous straight-line distance in any direction at sea" from Karachi to Kamchatka was originally added to Wikipedia by user Muh1974 on 21 January 2010 and then confirmed by Chabukswar and Mukherjee in 2018.[6] The source of this discovery before 2010 is unknown as of August 2022[update].
- ^ The elevation given here was established by a GPS survey in February 2016. The survey was carried out by a team from the French Research Institute for Development, working in cooperation with the Ecuadorian Military Geographic Institute.[12]
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