SOCIAL MEDIA
Mt. Fuji peak turns snowless, may be due to recent typhoon
INQUIRER.net / 07:55 PM October 31, 2017
“Rare Mt. Fuji without snow!” Image: Twitter/@ok2serebu
Japanese netizens are buzzing about the currently snowless peak of the country’s tallest mountain, Mt. Fuji.
The mountain has been known for the constant blanket of snow covering its peak. Although the amount of snow does vary throughout the year, the mountain completely losing its white snowcap looks unusual.
How Mt. Fuji would normally look like. Image: INQUIRER.net stock photo
Japanese Twitter users were shocked to discover Mt. Fuji completely barren of its white peak. The cause may have been the typhoon which passed through eastern Japan not too long ago, reports Livedoor News via SoraNews24.
Netizens took photos of the “naked” Mt. Fuji and shared it on social media.
Read more: https://technology.inquirer.net/68613/mt-fuji-peak-turns-snowless-may-be-due-to-recent-typhoon#ixzz6hZWGCKYQ
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Typhoon blown away the whoe snow capped? Outrageous excuse.
ReplyDeleteNo reasonable at all for whole snow 360 degree round wiped out.
Wind is one way, how it can blow off the other side?
Didn't check soil warm or surface temperature up there?
They are hiding important data from publicity.
Could be spoeculated that the mountain is getting warmer and warmer.
No warning signal?