Japan's Mount Fuji sees snow for first time this winter, 21 days later than usual
Mount Fuji's summit received its first winter snow on Thursday. This event occurred 21 days later than the average recorded since 1894. The iconic mountain, a symbol of Japan, was observed to be snow-capped. This year's snowfall arrived earlier th...

This year's snowfall came two weeks earlier than 2024, when snow settled on the 3,776-metre (12,388-ft) mountain only on November 7, the latest since records began.
The sacred mountain is among Japan's most enduring symbols - its snow-capped summit has inspired some of Japan's greatest works of art, such as Katsushika Hokusai's "Great Wave Off Kanagawa," which now features on the back of the 1,000-yen note.
While the first snowfall on Fuji has arrived later in recent years, the cause was uncertain, Mamoru Matsumoto of the Kofu observatory office of the meteorological agency told Reuters last year.
Japan recorded its highest-ever temperature in August when it reached 41.8 degrees Celsius (107.2 Fahrenheit) in the city of Isesaki to the northwest of Tokyo.
Fuji's "first" snowfall is defined as the first point after summer at which all or part of the mountain is visibly covered in snow or "white-looking solid precipitation" when observed from below, according to the Kofu observatory office of the meteorological agency.
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