SNOW FACTOIDS!
by
Gail Skroback Hennessey
One inch of water is about six inches of wet snow or 12 inches of fluffy snow.
The world's largest snowflake was 15 inches wide and 8 inches thick. It fell in Fort Keogh, Montana, on January 28, 1887.
Snow can be colors other than white, including blue, orange, green, yellow, and purple. Actually, snowflakes are clear.
Air pollution caused orange snow to fall over an area of Siberia, Russia, in 2007.
Mount Baker, in the North Cascades, of Washington State, holds the record for the most snowfall. 1140 inches fell during 1998-1999.
The record for the most snow in one storm, within 24 hours, was in Silver Lake, Colorado. Back in 1921, Silver Lake received 76 inches of snow.
Heilongjiang Province, China, holds the record for the world's largest snow sculpture. In 2007, a snow sculpture 656 ft. long and 116 ft. tall was made.
Snow flakes have SIX sides.
On average, a snowflake falls to earth at 3.1 mph.
One snowflake contains about 10 quintillion water molecules (that's the number 10 with 10 zeroes).
Did you know that Valdez, Alaska, averages 326 inches of snow a year? That makes it the snowiest state.
Wilson A. Bentley studied snowflakes for much of his life and is probably the most famous snowflake researcher. He was nicknamed "Snowflake" Bentley.
According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the world record for the most snowmen built in one hour is 2,036. The record set, on February 28, 2015, involved 1406 people.
If you have "chionophobia", you have a fear of snow.
Bethel, Maine, has the record for the largest snowman ever built. A 122 ft. snow-woman was built in 2008.
Extension Activities:
Illustrate one of the factoids.
Pretend you are a snowflake. Tell about a day in your life. What did you do? What did you see? Feel? Etc.
Do a paper cutting of a snowflake. Write a poem using each of the letters of the word snowflake.
Check out my resource:
Snow Reading Passages/Extension Activities
Get the FREE downloadable version at this link.
Gail
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