Earth ChangesS


Binoculars

Rare moon dogs light up the skies over Winnipeg, Manitoba

Moon dogs over Winnipeg, Manitoba
© Scott McCulloughMoon dogs appeared in the Manitoba sky early Thursday morning.
Winnipeggers were treated to a relatively rare sight in the inky sky early Thursday before sunrise.

Bright spots, known as moon dogs, were visible on both sides of a halo that ringed the moon.

The lunar halo and spots only happen when there are ice crystals in the air and the moon is bright enough - quarter moon or more - to shine light that can be refracted by the crystals, according to The Stargazer's Guide to the Night Sky.


Attention

Southern California's drought deepens dramatically

Los Angeles skyline
© AP Photo/Damian DovarganesIn this Dec. 14, 2017 file photo, Los Angeles skyline is seen through burned trees after a brush fire erupted in the hills in Elysian Park in Los Angeles.
California is rapidly plunging back into drought, with severe conditions now existing in Santa Barbara, Ventura and Los Angeles counties-home to one-fourth of the state's population, a national drought monitor said Thursday.

The weekly report released by the U.S. Drought Monitor, a project of government agencies and other partners, also shows 44 percent of the state is now considered to be in a moderate drought. It's a dramatic jump from just last week, when the figure was 13 percent.

"It's not nearly where we'd like to be," Frank Gehrke, a state official, acknowledged after separately carrying out manual measurements of winter snowfall in the Sierra Nevada mountains, which supplies water to millions of Californians in a good, wet year.

Overall, the vital snowpack Thursday stood at less than a third of normal for the date.

Question

What's causing the loud booms heard in Springfield, Missouri?

Mystery boom (stock)
© Getty Images
No, you're not crazy.

Those loud booms you've been hearing? The city of Springfield wants to know more about them.

City spokeswoman Cora Scott said Wednesday that the city has received two formal service requests and nine calls about the booms in the past few weeks.

And after more booms were heard early Wednesday morning, many more people are chirping about the booms on social media.

Scott said the city wants residents who have "experienced hearing or feeling" the booms to contact them with the exact time, date and location. Residents can call 417-864-1010, email city@springfieldmo.gov or post on the city's Facebook page.

Angela Edwards, 47, has lived her whole life in Springfield and said she has never heard anything like what she heard early Wednesday morning. "This is something huge. This is something big ... I wouldn't know how to describe it. It was like a deep, loud boom," Edwards said. "It wasn't normal - whatever it was."

Cloud Precipitation

France: Winter 2017-18 had the most rain and least sun

stormy skies
This winter has officially been one of the rainiest and least sunny on record.
This winter has officially been one of the rainiest and least sunny on record, according to a forecaster at Météo France.

The period from December 2017 to January 2018 has seen between 30% and 50% less sun than the usual seasonal average, and a significant part of the country has been affected by much higher-than-usual rainfall, according to Olivier Proust, a national forecaster, speaking to news website France Info.

This will come as no surprise to many, with several regions - including Ile-de-France - continuing to be at risk of floods and broken riverbanks.

The Seine river is said to have reached a peak of 5.95 metres in Paris today (Sunday January 28), and in the town of Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, Val-de-Marne, just two days ago, over 390 people had been evacuated from their homes, and over 14,000 households were left without electricity power due to catastrophic flood levels.

Comment: A dark December: In one month Moscow totals 6 minutes of sunlight while Belgium bears just 10.5 hours


Seismograph

Shallow 6.0 magnitude earthquake on the Pacific Antarctic Ridge

graph
6.0 magnitude earthquake

2018-02-02 11:37:53 UTC

USGS page: M 6.0 - 265km NE of Scott Island Bank, Antarctica
USGS status: Reviewed by a seismologist
Reports from the public: 0 people

10 km depth

Comment: This latest quake comes 24 hours after this one: Shallow 6.0 magnitude earthquake in the Fiji region


Question

Millions of kangaroos wiped out by mystery disease that causes massive haemorrhages and internal bleeding

Red kangaroos have died from massive ­hemorrhaging and internal bleeding (stock image)
Red kangaroos have died from massive ­hemorrhaging and internal bleeding (stock image)
A mysterious illness has been killing millions of kangaroos which has left experts scratching their heads.

In NSW, wildlife researchers have found the red and grey varieties of kangaroos have died as a result of massive ­hemorrhaging and internal bleeding around the joints.

'You would see a whole family sitting there but they were all dead,' veterinarian Greg Curran told The Australian.

'It's a disease, it's not a genetic problem. We haven't been able to find a bacteria, we haven't been able to find a virus.

'Parasites, they aren't part of it. Given the huge area and different kinds of country and feed, its very unlikely to be a plant poisoning. You've ruled out all the known causes of diseases.

"The drop is so great it can't simply be due to culling rates. The number of ­animals that have been harvested for the meat market is low. It can't possibly be starvation or malnutrition,' Dr Curren added.

Snowflake

Global cooling continues after an El Niño induced string of warm years

Sea ice covers Cape Cod Bay as viewed from Rock Harbor Beach, Cape Cod, in Orleans, MA, on Wed., Jan. 3, 2018. Image credit: Scott Eisen/Getty Images.
© Scott Eisen/Getty Images.Sea ice covers Cape Cod Bay as viewed from Rock Harbor Beach, Cape Cod, in Orleans, MA, on Wed., Jan. 3, 2018.
From Dr. Roy Spencer:

UAH Global Temperature Update for January, 2018: +0.26 deg. C

Coolest tropics since June, 2012 at -0.12 deg. C.

The Version 6.0 global average lower tropospheric temperature (LT) anomaly for January, 2018 was +0.26 deg. C, down from the December, 2017 value of +0.41 deg. C:

Attention

Large whales are dying along the East Coast at an alarming rate - 29 minkes in a year, 62 humpbacks in 2 years and 18 right whales in 8 months

whale
© Jason Minto, The News Journal
Three of the five large whale species known to frequent First State waters have been washing up on East Coast beaches at an alarming rate.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration on Wednesday announced minke whales - as well as humpback and endangered North Atlantic right whales - are experiencing what officials call "an unusual mortality event."

This is the first time the agency has seen three unusual mortality events of large whale species occur at the same time and in the same place, said Teri Rowles, coordinator of NOAA's Marine Mammal Health and Stranding Program.

"We're still going through the analysis to determine what might be the cause, and as we pull that information together across all the [species], then we'll have a better idea if there is a common causal or contributing agent that can be driving those [deaths]," Rowles said.

Map

Sinkhole appears on beach in French Riviera (PHOTOS)

Big Crater Seen on Beach in French Riviera (PHOTOS)
© FP 2018/ VALERY HACHE
The beach saw similar incidents at least three times over the last decade. Authorities plan to conduct a geological probe at the site.

A crater with a diameter of five and a depth of two meters appeared in Nice on Lido beach, French channel BFMTV reported.

Comment: Clearly this crater/sinkhole's appearance isn't such a common occurrence and, when we take into account the huge increase in sightings around the world, this could be part of a more concerning phenomenon: For a more in-depth look on the topic, see: Sinkholes: The groundbreaking truth


Cloud Precipitation

Record rains cause flooding in Tarija, Bolivia - 50,000 affected

Flood damaged roads in Yacuiba, Bolivia, January 2018
© Government of YacuibaFlood damaged roads in Yacuiba, Bolivia, January 2018
Record rainfall in southern Bolivia has prompted local authorities to declare a state of emergency for parts of Gran Chaco province in Tarija Department.

Areas around the towns and cities of Yacuiba, Camiri and Villamontes in Gran Chaco province, Tarija Department, have all seen flooding after days of heavy rain.

Record rainfall hit the city of Yacuiba on Sunday 28 January, 2018. Roads were flooded and 15 communities were left isolated. At least 3 houses were destroyed, although full damage assessments are yet to be completed.

Heavy rain has been falling in the areas since last week. Yacuiba recorded 98.2 mm of rain in 24 hours to 26 January. Then record rainfall hit 2 days later when the city saw 194.2 mm of rain in 24 hours to 28 January, beating the previous high of 178 mm set in 1985. The rain continued with a further 48.2 mm falling in 24 hours to 31 January.