Recently, the sand and dust from the Sahara desert swept through Europe, and the sky and snow in many European countries were dyed orange. The picture is a schematic diagram, not related to this article.
In recent days, dust from the Sahara Desert has swept through Europe with the help of strong winds, turning the skies and snow in many countries orange, and the air quality in the region has also deteriorated rapidly.
The huge dust belt moving northward from Algeria hit southern and central Europe, turning the slopes of the Alps and Pyrenees into orange and the skies of Algiers into red. On February 6, local Time, the Sahara dust will be the Alps ski resort snow dyed orange; located in Switzerland’s Ferra Valley (Val Ferret) La Fouly (La Fouly) ski resort, there are people photographed the snow covered with a thick layer of orange sand and dust, the sky also showed a bizarre yellow.
The French Pyrenees were hit by Saharan dust on February 6 local time, and the ski resort in the Principality of Andorra (Andorra) was covered with yellow sand. The Chamonix Mont-Blanc Valley in eastern France also saw orange snow due to the invasion of Saharan dust. Orange snow also appeared locally in Germany on Feb. 7, local time.
The French National Meteorological and Climatological Agency tweeted a satellite image showing a low-pressure system on the Iberian Peninsula creating a strong southward flow that blew Saharan dust into Europe as far as France.
In the Sestriere region of the western Italian Alps near the French border, a user photographed a ski car parked on snow colored orange by sand and dust, calling it simply a “Martian landscape.
The phenomenon of dust storms invading Europe is not uncommon, usually appearing every few years, but this year’s appearance of time than early, and a very wide range. Some users said that after the dust storm, car wash services may be in short supply.
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