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Snow on Northern Japan

Heavy Snows on Northern Japan
One of the Expedition 39 crew members aboard the International Space Station used an 800mm lens to record a still image documenting the unusually heavy snows which fell on northern Japan this winter.

ISS039-E-003841 (21 March 2014) — One of the Expedition 39 crew members aboard the International Space Station used an 800mm lens to record a still image documenting the unusually heavy snows which fell on northern Japan this winter. Snow highlights the flat, fenced landscape used for agriculture in this image taken on March 21, 2014. The large Tokachi River reaches the arc of the Pacific Ocean on Hokkaido’s east coast. Forests on steeper hillsides mask the snow and appear dark (upper image margin and image center). The view shows the narrow greenbelt forests that line the coast. Planted in Japan for at least the last four centuries, greenbelts protect coastlines from storms and sand movement, and are increasingly providing recreation areas. Greenbelts also reduce tsunami wave energy, protecting houses and roads from floating debris. Greenbelt forests reduced the destructive effects of the 2011 tsunami at Sendai by “catching” entire seagoing vessels, preventing them from being washed inland.

Photo credit: NASA