[10] In addition to the Sovkhoz, there was also a polar station in the village called Netten, (Russian: Нэттэн).
[15] This had risen to 275 people by 1943, including 259 Chukchi, 15 Yupik and one person classified as a "visitor" upon whose nationality the source does not elaborate,[15] though these figures are combined totals for both Enurmino and the, now abandoned, nearby village of Pouten.
[15] The population had increased further to 290 by 1989, of whom 260 were Chukchi and the remaining 30 classified again as "visitors"[15] and again, as of March 2003, to 297, of which 296 were indigenous peoples.
[12] Enurmino is not connected to any other part of the world by permanent road and is 200 miles away from the district centre Lavrentiya.
[15] There is, however, a very small network of roads within the village including:[17] Enurmino has a Tundra climate (ET)[18] because the warmest month has an average temperature between 0 °C (32 °F) and 10 °C (50 °F).