Climate
The Arctic Tundra is located at lattitudes 55 degrees to 77 degrees North and in the Nothern Hemisphere. The tundra is cold throughout the whole year and the summer is very mild, where the sun shine 24 hours a day. The summer only losts 6 to 10 weeks. In the summer it never gets warmer then 45 to 50 degrees F. During the winter months the sun barely rises. In the winter the temperature never goes about 20 degrees F and averages between -20 to -30 degrees F. The tundra usually gets 6 to 10 inches of rain, which includes melting snow, per year. The only special conditions the tundra can have is avalanches from the collapsing and melting snow.