Snow in Antarctica, Turning Red
Over the past few weeks, snow around Ukraine’s Vernadsky Research Base, located off the coast of Antarctica’s northernmost peninsula, has started to take on a red tinge, courtesy of an algae that thrives in freezing weather. Because of the red tinge, the snow is often dubbed “watermelon snow”.
Reasons for snow turning red
- Such algae as found around the Ukrainian research base grow well in freezing temperatures and liquid water. During the summer, when these typically green algae get a lot of sun, they start producing a natural sunscreen that paints the snow in shades of pink and red. In ....
Do You Want to Read More?
Subscribe Now
Take Annual Subscription and get the following Advantage
The annual members of the Civil Services Chronicle can read the monthly content of the magazine as well as the Chronicle magazine archives.
Readers can study all the material before the last six months of the Civil Services Chronicle monthly issue in the form of Chronicle magazine archives.
Related Content
- 1 Climate Change Fuels Record Global Wildfires
- 2 IUCN Council approves 48 New Member Organisations
- 3 Kanha Tiger Reserve
- 4 Kerala’s Sacred Groves Restoration Programme
- 5 Nagatitan chaiyaphumensis: Largest Known Dinosaur from Southeast Asia
- 6 New Worm-Eating Snake Species discovered in Mizoram and Myanmar
- 7 New Freshwater Catfish Species discovered in Northern Western Ghats
- 8 Delhi Declares 670 Hectares of Central Ridge as Reserved Forest
- 9 Barn Swallow Population in Manipur’s Imphal Valley
- 10 IMD Launches AI-Based Weather Forecasting Products

