Snow Falls Over World’s Largest Desert for the First Time Since 1979


snow in saraha

Snow is falling over the Sahara desert — something that hasn’t happened in decades.

This might not be the first place you’d expect to find a festive snowy scene, but incredible images show the Sahara desert looking particularly chilly.

It is just the second time in living memory that snow has fallen, with the last occasion being in February 1979.

He captured the amazing moment snow fell on the red sand dunes in the world’s largest hot desert.

Snow was last seen in Ain Sefra, which is known as ‘The Gateway to the Desert’, on February 18, 1979 – when the snow storm lasted just half an hour.

This time the snow stayed for a day in the town, which is around 1,000 metres above sea level and surrounded by the Atlas Mountains.

No convoluted explanation from the world’s top climate change scientists yet. But they are certain to shoehorn this into the global warming narrative somehow. One solar physicist has claimed that these scientists are trying to cover up the fact that profound global cooling is headed our way.

Remember, any whether event — whether hot or cold — has been linked to the theory of climate change. That way, they are never wrong.

Source: Daily Mail



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  1. Gregory Schambers

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