Scientists claim that falling snowflakes up to six inches wide are common place on Earth. Wow! I would love to witness these snowfalls firsthand... and probably getting myself buried under the snow in the process given the accelerated snowfall rate and the sheer size of the flakes.
Link & Image: New York Times
Tags: Snowflake | Snow | Weather
Since at least the 19th century, people have periodically claimed to see giant snowflakes falling from the sky — big ones the size of saucers and plates or even larger, their edges turned up, their heaviness making them descend faster than small flakes.
Now, theorists, weather historians and field observers are concluding that most of the reports are true and that unusually large snowflakes two to six inches wide and perhaps wider fall regularly around the globe, surprisingly big and fluffy, if seldom witnessed or celebrated. Guinness World Records lists the largest snowflakes as having fallen during a storm in January 1887 at Fort Keogh, in Montana. A rancher nearby, the book says, called them “larger than milk pans” and measured one at 15 inches wide. But no corroborating evidence supports the claim.
Link & Image: New York Times
Tags: Snowflake | Snow | Weather
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