A storm on March 5 dumped just over 100.8 inches (or 8 feet, 4 inches) of snow there in 18 hours, reports the Italian weather website Meteoweb. The snowfall inundated the city and left some in the region without power and water.
"It was a spectacle that took our breath away. In some parts of the village the snow was like a long white wall," village mayor Antonio Monaco told the Italian news agency ANSA, as translated to English by the Telegraph.
"It was tough but everybody pulled together and made sure that the old people who couldn't leave their houses had the food and medicines that they needed."
Capracotta sits at an elevation of 4,662 feet in central Italy, just an hour and a half drive from the country's eastern coast.
CNN cautions the record isn't official yet. Assuming the World Meteorological Association verifies the amount of snowfall, however, the storm would break previous records dating back to the 1920s.
In 1921, a mid-April storm in Silver Lake, Colorado dropped 75.8 inches of snow in a day, setting a record for the most snow to fall in the U.S. in 24 hours. Over the course of 32 and a half hours, the storm ultimately deposited more than 95 inches of snow.
Check out more photos of the snow in Capracotta below:
Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/03/11/capracotta-snow-italy-photos_n_6847562.html?utm_hp_ref=travel&ir=Travel and provided by entertainment-movie-news.com
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