Two skiers have become the latest victims of the extreme weather hitting the Alps. The amount of snow falling has broken records in several ski resorts.
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Heavy snow creates chaos in southern Germany and Austria
Snowfall has created chaos in Bavaria and neighboring areas with no sign of letting up. From falling tree warnings to major transport disruption, DW takes a look at the extreme weather phenomenon crippling the south.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/L. Mirgeler
'Snow chaos'
For days, the German state of Bavaria has been inundated by massive amounts of snow. Munich police urged drivers to deal with the snow covering their vehicles or face potential fines after tweeting a picture of a car (not this one!) shrouded in ice at a stoplight. German media has dubbed the extreme weather phenomenon "Schneechaos" — or snow chaos.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/T. Hase
Helping out
In Berchtesgaden, a town in the Bavarian Alps near the Austrian border, Germany's armed forces — the Bundeswehr — had to deliver much-needed supplies in the middle of the night. The reason: the road to the village was cut off by the sheer amount of snow fall. As such, the military had the only transport vehicles able to reach the area. Local tram services were also in no state to run.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/T. Hase
Snow pyramid
A festive pyramid diorama was covered in snow in Schönheide, a town near the Czech border in eastern Germany. Snow plows have been pressed to find places to pile the snow from the street after a blizzard powdered the Ore Mountains.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/V. Heinz
Roof brigade
Firefighters dislodged piles of snow from a roof in the western Austrian town of Mariazell. Since January 5, around 3,700 firefighters have been called upon in the Austrian state of Styria to help deal with the flurry.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/F. Fink
Stuck
For some, the snow kept them from reaching home. Hundreds of drivers had to sleep in their vehicles overnight after being trapped on the highway between Munich and Salzburg. In an editorial, the conservative newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ) said climate change may be a contributing factor to the "chaotic amounts of snow" and shows how quickly areas can be changed by its effects.
Image: picture alliance/dpa/B. März
Air support
A "Super Puma" helicopter was prepared for takeoff in a parking lot in Schönau am Königsee, a town in southeast Bavaria. The helicopters were used to blow snow from trees and onto roads to prevent trees and their branches from falling onto cars passing by.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/L. Mirgeler
Emergency work
A fireman cleared off snow from a roof in the Berchtesgaden region of Bavaria near the Austrian border. More than 1,000 emergency workers were dispatched to Upper Bavaria to deal with the snow.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/L. Mirgeler
More warnings
But Bavaria wasn't the only place in Germany to be affected by the snowfall. North of Bavaria in the German state of Thuringia, park authorities warned people against entering forests, saying enormous snow loads threatened to bring down numerous trees. Several roads were also closed by deep snow and fallen trees.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Reichel
Snow day
While not nearly as chaotic as Bavaria and Thuringia, the German state of Baden-Württemberg received plenty of snow too. In Stuttgart, buildings were covered by the white powder frost, while in some parts of the state, school children were allowed to take the day off.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/B. Weißbrod
Freezing neighbors
For days now, Austrian authorities have issued avalanche warnings for its Alpine slopes. At least eight people have been killed by weather-related incidents. In some cases, rescuers have had to save people stranded in cut-off areas. On Thursday, nine tourists from Russia, Ukraine, Poland and Hungary had to be rescued after venturing off-piste in the Zell am See resort area.
While Germany and Austria have received a lot of extreme weather coverage, that doesn't mean other parts of Europe weren't inundated by snowfall. As far south as Greece, refugee children took it as an opportunity to enjoy the outdoors with a snowball or two. Switzerland, Slovenia, Italy and Turkey also received their share.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/ANE
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A Czech ski instructor was killed by an avalanche when he was skiing off-piste with his father at the Ankogel mountain in southern Austria on Tuesday. He was swept away and buried by loose snow, according to police.
In Switzerland, a 20-year-old Swedish skier also died on Tuesday in an avalanche near Haute-Nendaz in the Valais above the Rhone river valley. She was wearing a transmitter that meant she was quickly found and dug out quickly but did not survive.
The third successive week of heavy snowfall in the eastern Alps, meant some resorts in Austria, southern Germany and Switzerland reported 3 meters (10 feet) of settled snow.
Warmer, wetter weather with rain falling on the settled snow has increased the risk of avalanches.
Thousands cut off
Although the snow eased on Tuesday, people were still cut off from road transport. In Salzburg province in Austria, about 40,000 residents and tourists were unable to move out.
An avalanche swept into two Austrian mountain inns, with snow and ice crashing through windows and down a staircase at a hotel in Ramsau. The 60 guests were able to escape.
In Switzerland, soldiers posted to the Davos ahead of next week's World Economic Forum narrowly escaped harm from an avalanche triggered by a controlled explosion. Images of their escape were posted on social media.
The snow and heavy winds also wreaked havoc in Slovakia, where there were several traffic accidents and roads came to a standstill.
In Bavaria, the water levels in the river Woernitz rose and flooded roads and houses in Harburg, north west of Munich.