
Updated
Parts of eastern Europe were blanketed with orange-tinted snow over the weekend.
The phenomenon has been seen across Russia, Bulgaria, Ukraine, Romania and Moldova.
Meteorologists said sand from Sahara desert storms mixing with snow and rain caused the orange snow.
It occurs roughly once every five years.
This sandstorm made its way from Greece to Russia, and could be seen via NASA satellite imagery.
Skiers and snowboarders near Sochi, Russia posted photos of the unusual sight.
"We're skiing on Mars today," one user posted on Instagram.



Topics: weather, snowfall, human-interest, russian-federation, bulgaria, ukraine, romania, moldova-republic-of
First posted