If too much rain or snow falls at once, it can lead to flooding, landslides, or avalanches. Excessive rainfall can overwhelm drainage systems, causing water to accumulate and flood low-lying areas. Heavy snowfall can increase the risk of avalanches in mountainous regions and cause roofs to collapse under the weight.
The crystalline water that falls out of the cold atmosphere is known as snow. Snow forms when water vapor in the atmosphere freezes into ice crystals and then falls to the ground.
Snow is frozen water vapor that falls to Earth as flakes.
Precipitation always falls as snow in polar regions, such as the Arctic and Antarctic. The consistently cold temperatures in these regions prevent the snow from melting and transitioning into rain.
Snow is an example of a precipitation in the form of ice crystals that falls from the atmosphere.
more and more snow falls on it and the snow gets too much weight on it and falls
the Victoria Falls rainforest
ohh so i have to answereverything
no it does not snow in the rain forest.
500ft
It is different according to where you live
About a foot annually
HINT! Its a rain forest, is there ever snow in a rainforest? Answer that, and you've got your answer.
About 10.4- 11.2 inches daily.
None. It is much too warm in a tropical rainforest to snow.
Tropical rainforests never get snow. Mid-latitude rain forests, such as in southeastern Alaska, get many feet annually.
About 45 inches annually.