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Description
The snow did not just block the roads; it buried entire homes under twenty-six feet of solid ice, suffocating thousands of people before they could even attempt to dig out. When discussing the deadliest natural disasters in history, blizzards are rarely mentioned. People expect to freeze during a severe snowstorm, but they do not expect to be completely buried alive under twenty-six feet of solid white ice. In February 1972, the deadliest blizzard in recorded human history struck a region entirely unaccustomed to such catastrophic winter logic: Iran.Over a grueling, uninterrupted week, a massive weather anomaly dumped up to eight meters of snow across the rural northwestern region of the country. This book uncovers the absolute terror of the 1972 Iran Blizzard. It was a disaster where buildings did not collapse; they simply vanished beneath the snowpack. Over 4,000 people suffocated or froze in their own homes, unable to dig their way out through roofs buried under the crushing weight of the ice.We examine the paralyzed rescue logistics, where helicopters flew over flattened landscapes completely unable to identify where villages had once stood. The narrative explores the chilling meteorological conditions that turned a dry mountainous region into an inescapable freezer.Confront the brutal power of the atmosphere. Discover the forgotten week when the sky systematically erased two hundred villages from the map.



