Weather

The Coldest Temperature Ever Recorded In Colorado

Temperatures have plunged below zero degrees in every continental U.S. state. See the coldest temperature ever recorded in Colorado.

COLORADO –As several states in the Midwest hunker down for historically low wind chills, that got us thinking — What was the coldest temperature ever recorded in Colorado? According to The Weather Channel, the coldest temperature was 61 degrees below zero. St. Louis Today reported it happened in Maybell, Colorado on Feb. 1, 1985.

If that sounds cold, get this — the coldest temperature ever recorded in the country was in Alaska 48 years ago, when thermometers read 80 degrees below zero in Prospect Creek, near Fairbanks. The coldest temperature recorded in the continental U.S. was 70 degrees below zero at Rogers Pass, Montana, in 1954.

Colorado's residents are not as worried about frostbite as their Midwestern cousins. Although the temperatures will dip into the single digits this week in parts of Colorado, the average daytime temperature will be in the 50s in Denver during the week, with a high of 56 degrees on Saturday.

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As you might expect, the coldest temperatures in the Southeast pale in comparison to the Mountain West and Great Plains. While Florida’s coldest temperature was a measly 2 degrees below zero, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, Idaho, North Dakota and Minnesota have each seen temperatures fall to at least 60 degrees below zero.

No state will come close to breaking those records this week, but that’s not going to warm the hearts of people in the Midwest. Some Minnesotans this week will see wind chills as low as 62 degrees below zero in some places. The Twin Cities area woke up Tuesday with temperatures around 10 degrees below zero and wind chill readings estimated the temperatures felt more like a bone-chilling 32-below zero.

Find out what's happening in Goldenwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Subzero temperatures and similarly fierce wind chills are also expected in Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin and Ohio as a breakdown in the polar vortex blasts arctic cold south, leaving many states feeling more like Antarctica this week — only colder. In fact, 75 percent of the continental U.S. is expected to see temperatures fall below freezing this week, CNN reported.

Patch national staffer Dan Hampton contributed to this report.

Photo credit: Spencer Platt/Getty Images


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