Wednesday’s -53°C reading in the Yukon
Extreme cold crossed over from Siberia to the Yukon this week, sending temperatures into rare territory for this early in the year.Braeburn, Yukon, recorded a -53°C reading on Wednesday, which is the coldest it’s been this early in the year since Ross River, Yukon, registered that same temperature on Dec. 5, 1995. Whitehorse also experienced their earliest -40°C temperature since 2006.
This slug of Arctic air is dislodged and on the move to round out the week, which will send temperatures plummeting throughout much of the country.Folks across the Prairies would be wise to stay inside on Friday if possible, as widespread wind chills in the -30s and -40s will be common across all three provinces.
The frosty air will move into Ontario and Quebec by Sunday, with forecast daytime high temperatures of -6°C in Toronto, -8°C in Montreal, and -9°C in Ottawa.While the heart of the cold air will fall apart as it interacts with the warmer waters of the Great Lakes, we’ll still see below-seasonal air head toward Atlantic Canada to start the next workweek. This could even help to kick off our next winter storm for portions of the region.
Environment Canada