I’m pretty sure some places above 2000m get snow in Indonesia
clamorous_owle on
Not sure if measuring snowfall by *country* is the best option. In the US, for example, averaging Michigan and Florida produces a useless stat.
Chile is home to the Atacama Desert, one of the driest places on Earth. But on that map it gets lumped together with Norway.
MarioDiBian on
Crazy that Argentina, Chile and New Zealand are the only countries in the whole southern hemisphere where it regularly snows at sea level, while there are plenty of countries in the northern hemisphere.
_MrSeb on
It only snowed once in Uruguay decades ago
Ricky911_ on
I can assure you Italy is wrong. I lived in Turin (250m above sea level) for 2 years and it did not snow once despite being the coldest major city in Italy. Maybe, close to the 500m mark, it snowed in some areas but I certainly would not call it a regular occurrence at all.
Edit: why am I being downvoted for telling the truth? I’m literally just sharing my experience. I could literally see 3500m tall mountains from the streets and the Winter snow would begin halfway up
Por_TheAdventurer on
Monaco and Uruguay have no snow. Why?
dr_koka on
Yeah, right, snowfall in Florida, Hawaii and Minnesota… completely comparable.
EUIVAlexander on
What is regular?
flinjager123 on
Malta: only over 500m
Meanwhile: highest point is 253m
They’re not wrong, I guess.
Tornirisker on
Dont’know whether in southern Europe *every year* it snows under 500 m. Well, ten years ago it was true.
OX0045 on
The table is backwards
Leave A Reply
Du musst angemeldet sein, um einen Kommentar abzugeben.
11 Kommentare
I’m pretty sure some places above 2000m get snow in Indonesia
Not sure if measuring snowfall by *country* is the best option. In the US, for example, averaging Michigan and Florida produces a useless stat.
Chile is home to the Atacama Desert, one of the driest places on Earth. But on that map it gets lumped together with Norway.
Crazy that Argentina, Chile and New Zealand are the only countries in the whole southern hemisphere where it regularly snows at sea level, while there are plenty of countries in the northern hemisphere.
It only snowed once in Uruguay decades ago
I can assure you Italy is wrong. I lived in Turin (250m above sea level) for 2 years and it did not snow once despite being the coldest major city in Italy. Maybe, close to the 500m mark, it snowed in some areas but I certainly would not call it a regular occurrence at all.
Edit: why am I being downvoted for telling the truth? I’m literally just sharing my experience. I could literally see 3500m tall mountains from the streets and the Winter snow would begin halfway up
Monaco and Uruguay have no snow. Why?
Yeah, right, snowfall in Florida, Hawaii and Minnesota… completely comparable.
What is regular?
Malta: only over 500m
Meanwhile: highest point is 253m
They’re not wrong, I guess.
Dont’know whether in southern Europe *every year* it snows under 500 m. Well, ten years ago it was true.
The table is backwards