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Snow-washed Greece by Staff Writers Paris (ESA) Feb 11, 2022
Rare snowfall over Greece may be the new normal. For the second year in a row, Greece experienced unprecedented amounts of snow, blanketing the country in white. ESA astronaut Matthias Maurer took this bird's eye view of the town of Chalcis, along the Euboean Gulf, from the International Space Station in early February. He posted to social media, noting, "In keeping with its national colours, wintry Greece presented itself in blue and white." Storm Elpida swept across Greece and also parts of Turkey, causing mass disruption to the Mediterranean country known more for white-sand beaches and whitewashed homes than snow. While hard to deny the beauty of the white and blue landscape of this image, it is a grim reminder of the effects of climate change on the planet. Especially when compared to photos of wildfires in Greece in the summer of 2021, imaged by ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet during his Alpha mission. Like satellites watching Earth from above, astronauts are also observers of a rapidly changing Earth. Photos taken by astronauts complement satellite data but also serve another vital role: climate advocacy to the general public. Matthias is doing important science on board the International Space Station for his Cosmic Kiss mission and is active on social media to share the benefits and the warnings. A pretty picture like this says a thousand words on how humans are interacting with and affecting our surroundings. We can be both in awe of the beauty and the reality of the situation. The question is: what will we do about it? Learn more about ESA's Space for a Green Future Accelerator and how it will help Europe act to mitigate climate change.
Seven Indian soldiers killed in Himalayan avalanche New Delhi (AFP) Feb 8, 2022 Indian army rescuers on Tuesday recovered the bodies of seven soldiers buried in an avalanche while on patrol along a remote Himalayan frontier contested by China. The troops were part of a larger deployment in Arunachal Pradesh state and were caught at an altitude of 4,400 metres (14,500 feet) in an area that had seen heavy snowfall in the days before Sunday's avalanche. Two days of searching in rough weather ended without the rescue team finding any survivors among the missing soldiers. ... read more
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