Explained: Snow on a Slide Curls Up Like a Blanket [A type of Snowroller]

derrick06

Active Member
Quick question to put here. In Geoengineering claims people always talk about some kind of foamy substance like the one picture here in my attachment. What is this in actuality?

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DELETE LATER.jpg Quick question to put here. In Geoengineering claims people always talk about some kind of foamy substance like the one picture here in my attachment. What is this in actuality?

This is a thin layer of snow that settled on a slide, at some point the way it melted caused it to slide off and fold up like that. You can see some snow on the ground in the background. An unusual combination of snowfall, temperatures, and time of day.

It's similar to the phenomenon known as "snow roller"
https://books.google.com/books?id=qJhFAQAAMAAJ&dq=snow roller&pg=RA1-PA95#v=onepage&q&f=false
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Quick question to put here. In Geoengineering claims people always talk about some kind of foamy substance like the one picture here in my attachment. What is this in actuality?
That's snow/slush from Colorado:


Can you post the claim saying it is a foamy substance?
 
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It seems like this is a common problem - conflating "very unusual", with "suspicious".

Very unusual things happen all the time, A one-in-a-billion-days weird thing happens to seven people every day. We just get to see these odd things more easily thanks to Facebook, etc.
 
http://swacgirl.blogspot.com/2008/01/winter-in-valley-curly-snow.html


https://www.flickr.com/photos/osecluna/5274885646/in/photostream/


http://linsartyblobs.blogspot.com/2010/02/mythical-mail-page-5-dr-foster-curly.html


http://epod.usra.edu/blog/2008/04/windshield-snow-blanket.html

The photo above showing a layer of "folded" snow on an automobile windshield was taken in Nevada City, California on January 20, 2008. Following several days of off-and-on snowfall, the Sun reappeared and melting quickly ensued. The snow on the windshield slipped onto the hood due to a combination of gravity and lubrication. Melt water created a nearly frictionless surface, which permitted the layer of snow to slide away. The moist snow layer was still cohesive enough to remain intact after it lost its grip.
Content from External Source
http://www.nextsteptv.com/?p=908
 
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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...-snow-tubes-form-freezing-car-windscreen.html



Snow slip: Also known as snowrollers, snow bales and snow doughnuts, the phenomenon requires a precise balance of air temperature, ice, snow, moisture and wind. In this case the snow on the roof of the car was dragged down as it curled on the windscreen

'A classic snow roll happens with the combination of lying snow and high wind speeds, mostly in North America and Northern Europe, and they can be as small as a tennis ball or as large as two feet across – depending on how strong the wind is and how smooth the surface of the snow is.

'They begin with a thick layer of snow, with the top layer just on the point of melting. That layer becomes sticky which can be peeled off the colder and more powdery snow beneath by the wind, forming a roll.'
Content from External Source
 
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