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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Snowshoe who wrote (137964)1/9/2018 3:49:33 PM
From: Elroy Jetson  Respond to of 217837
 
When Maurice told us about "the coming Ice Age" you should have taken his comment seriously, but not literally.

It's his new style of fact free communication.




To: Snowshoe who wrote (137964)1/10/2018 3:38:59 AM
From: Maurice Winn1 Recommendation

Recommended By
philv

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217837
 
19C average for all of Dec in Alaska = I don't believe it.
Fake news.
Mqurice



To: Snowshoe who wrote (137964)1/10/2018 6:02:07 AM
From: elmatador  Respond to of 217837
 
PHOTOS: The Sahara Desert, Painted White With Snow
January 9, 20181:24 PM ET



A scene of snow, striped in orange: This is how the desert surrounding Ain Sefra in Algeria appeared to residents for a few fleeting hours Sunday.

Zineddine Hashas/Geoff Robinson

For a few fleeting hours Sunday, people perched in the arid heights of northwest Algeria caught sight of something rarely seen: the Sahara Desert, shrouded in white. Residents of Ain Sefra, a small town surrounded by the Atlas Mountains of Northern Africa, walked outside to find a dusting of snow underfoot — and more than a foot of it crowding the town's outer boundaries.

While it's not unheard of — snow visited this landscape in December 2016, after all — the wintry weather is indeed rare for the region: As NPR's Maggie Penman pointed outat the time, the last major snowfall in Ain Sefra before that happened in 1979.



It was no mere flurry that hit the area. In some parts of the region surrounding Ain Sefra, as much as 16 inches of snow fell Sunday.

Karim Bouchetata/Geoff Robinson

But, as Forbes noted, the unlikely winter wonderland was not alone in experiencing extreme weather this past week — and indeed, it came about because of odd patterns elsewhere:

"The east coast of the United States continues to face the brutally cold winter storm Grayson and Sydney, Australia swelters in the hottest temperatures seen in nearly 80 years at 116.6 degrees Farenheight.

"High pressures over Europe caused cold air to be pulled down into northern Africa and into the Sahara Desert. This mass of cold air rose 3,280 feet to the elevation of Ain Sefra, a town surrounded by the Atlas Mountains, and began to snow early Sunday morning."

Still, the scene Sunday was not to last.

By late afternoon, the dunes' blazing orange and red had reasserted themselves over the surrounding palette, as rising temperatures forced the snow to give way again to sand.

Luckily for some residents, that vanishing act was not too fast to sneak in a quick sledding session. And luckily for us, some local photographers managed to capture the moment forever for folks who happened not to catch it in person.

Here are some of those photographs.



By late afternoon Sunday, the scene had retreated into its typical hues — but not before the snow was memorialized in a few astounding images.

Zineddine Hashas/Geoff Robinson



Ain Sefra is nestled in the heights of the Atlas Mountains in northwestern Algeria.

Karim Bouchetata/Geoff Robinson



Ain Sefra saw snow last winter, as well, but before 2016, it had been decades since the Algerian town had experienced a major snowfall.

Karim Bouchetata/Geoff Robinson
npr.org