Historic Snow Depth Records Fall Across China; U.S. Ski Resorts Pounded, 7 Feet In 7 Days for Mammoth; + Proof Of Climate Data Corruption
NOAA/NASA graphs have been "adjusted" to perfectly match rising CO2 levels, when they otherwise don't. Here's the proof.
Historic Snow Depth Records Fall Across China
Vast areas of China, even prefectures to the south, have been dealing with extreme cold and record-busting snow.
The flakes continued falling across China Tuesday, with 29 cm (11.4 inches) accumulating in Qianjiang, central province of Hubei, breaking the historical record there and snarling Lunar New Year traffic — the story across much of the country:
“Yunmeng railway station in heavy snow. It's snowing in the south of China these days.” — @TripInChina on X.
In total, 28 weather stations across China have set new snow depth records for the month of February, during what has been dubbed an event to rival, perhaps even surpass, the Great Ice Storm of 2008 (during the solar minimum of cycle 23).
Severe blizzards have battered many areas, with the snowfall proving relentless and stretching for "thousands of miles":
“Blanketed in snow, the Juzizhou Islet in Changsha, Central China's Hunan province, is a mesmerizing sight of "a thousand miles frozen, and endless snow drifting". Pure winter magic!” — @ChineseEmbinUAE on X.
Conditions have proved disruptive, with thousands of flights and rail serves have cancelled, and some 200+ sections of major roads have been closed—with hundreds-of-thousands, some reports say millions, of people stranded for 3 days and 3 nights:
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