Mother Jones
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Yesterday Twitter was lit up by images of a snowy Egypt. Like this one:
For the first time in 112 years, it snows in Cairo pic.twitter.com/Chrmfcj0G1
— Amr ElGabry (@AmrElGabry)
The cause, according to the Weather Underground, was a stalled area of low pressure.
However, there were also more dubious tweets, especially of this image:
Global warming hitting us hard RT “@fzammetti: Egypt’s first snow in 100+ years covers the Sphinx.” pic.twitter.com/g3W5AtC4LD
— Rothbardian (@Sebastian_JKT)
According to some sleuthing by Buzzfeed, that image actually seems to be of a theme park in Japan—where snow would be decidedly less extraordinary—that contains a sphinx replica.
Meanwhile, just how rare is snow in Egypt, anyway? Capital Weather Gang and New York Magazine have called into question assertions that it has not occurred in 112 years. Still, snow is extremely uncommon—as is rain, for that matter: According to Wunderground, Cairo receives less than an inch of rain per year.
And what of the global warming snark? Actually not that far off: The snowy weather does seem tied to a weirdly behaving jet stream, and one prominent scientific idea of late is that global warming is interfering with the jet stream, leading to “stuck” weather and all kinds of extremes.
Original link –
Yes, It Really Just Snowed in Egypt (Even If That Sphinx Photo Is Fake)