Earth Changes
Pilger has a population of about 350 people, according to the 2010 Census. Damage was also reported in Stanton, Nebraska, from that same storm.
Although rare, the phenomenon of simultaneous multiple tornadoes associated with the same severe thunderstorm is not unheard of. However, it is extremely rare for both tornadoes to be so intense and long-lasting. A more common phenomenon is to have so-called "satellite tornadoes" rotating around a main funnel, but in this case, it appears there were two independent, long-lived and powerful tornadoes about 1 to 2 miles apart.
Making this even more unusual, from a scientific standpoint, is that both tornadoes were spinning in the same direction.
Researchers from the UTA's Institute for Geophysics found that the Thwaites Glacier in western Antarctica is being eroded by the ocean as well as geothermal heat from magma and subaerial volcanoes. Thwaites is considered a key glacier for understanding future sea level rise.
UTA researchers used radar techniques to map water flows under ice sheets and estimate the rate of ice melt in the glacier. As it turns out, geothermal heat from magma and volcanoes under the glacier is much hotter and covers a much wider area than was previously thought.
"Geothermal flux is one of the most dynamically critical ice sheet boundary conditions but is extremely difficult to constrain at the scale required to understand and predict the behavior of rapidly changing glaciers," UTA researchers wrote in their study, which was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
But you will now... because a tornado was spotted in Korea earlier this week.
News of this twister, coupled with freak thunderstorms and torrential rain showers in recent days, has people asking if it's all down to climate change.
The worst flooding in the Balkans in over a century... an unusually heavy hailstorm in Sao Paulo, Brazil... and exceptionally heavy snowstorms in the central United States.
The effects of climate change are being seen across the globe through abnormal weather events... and Korea is no exception... as evidenced by the last few days.
A tornado near Ilsan in Gyeonggi-do province this Tuesday... was the first ever spotted on the mainland.
The twister lasted for at least an hour... leaving a trail of destruction in its path... with at least 21 greenhouses destroyed.
No deaths or injuries have been reported in the rains, which began early Friday and abated only on Sunday, dumping in 50 hours as much rain as is usually seen in the northeastern Brazilian city during the entire month of June. With more rains forecast for the next five days, some people worried that the weather could affect the U.S.-Ghana match on Monday afternoon.
Natal's City Hall declared a flood alert on Saturday and evacuated dozens of residents as a precaution in the Mae Luiza neighborhood in the city's west. News reports showed images of residents wading through knee-deep waters as others pushed cars submerged up to the door handles. Additional reports showed a huge crater cutting across a street in a residential neighborhood.
Did you think summer was here? Snow could fall in Elko County early this week at elevations above 7,000 feet, according to a National Weather Service advisory.
"In what will seem more like spring than almost summer, a strong weather-maker will bring enough cold air and moisture to higher terrain starting late Monday to produce snow showers over parts of northern Nevada," the notice stated.
Most valleys will not see any snowflakes, but northern Elko County - especially the Jarbidge Wilderness and other mountains east of Mountain City Highway - could get a couple inches of accumulation between late Monday and Wednesday.
The Ruby Mountains and East Humboldts also could receive a couple inches of snow.

Jimi Bradshaw from Florida plays with snow for the first ever in Tromsø on Monday.
"There have been both sleet and snow showers tonight, and people have even observed snow settling on the ground," Trond Lien, a local meteorologist, told the Tromsø-based Nordlys newspaper. "This is very rare, and I cannot remember the last time it snowed on June 16. It must be a long time ago."
He said he had found reports indicating snowfall in the city during July a century previously, but had yet to find any record of snow in June.
Odd Arne Thomassen, a professional driver, told NRK that he had encountered roughly four inches of snow when driving over Kvænangsfjellet in North Troms on Monday morning.
A second, 5.6-magnitude quake struck two hours later slightly closer to shore at a depth of 39 kilometres. Cities nearest to the epicentre included Iwaki, Kitaibaraki, Namie and Hitachi, USGS said. The same coastline was struck by a devastating quake and subsequent tsunami in 2011 that killed more than 18,000 people and sparked a meltdown at the Fukushima power plant - the world's worst nuclear accident in a generation.
USGS data magnitude 5.6
USGS data magnitude 5.7

Volcanic tremor under Chaparrastique volcano now reached similar to the pre-eruption of December 2013 measured values.
The Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources (MARN) reports seismic vibration under Chaparrastique volcano has been very intense in the last days. Local observers reported hearing a booming noise about this day at 2:00 am. There have been very little vapor or gas emissions so far. This indicates that the duct system of the volcano is partially obstructed, withstanding the pressure of magmatic fluids, so there is a high probability of eruptive activity, either through the central crater or on its flanks. Eruptions in the last 500 years have been in the VEI-1 to VEI-2 range.
In the last few days the vibration of the volcano reached similar to the pre-eruption of December 29, 2013 measured values. Since February 2014 several hundred microearthquakes have been recorded under the northern flank of the volcano.
MARN informs about the tremor status every hour and new reports here on twitter.

Red arrow: Place where the house was standing before the tornado, Yellow arrow: Place where the tornado left the house
"We were calling on God. Have mercy on us please," said Jeremiah Ashworth,
The Ashworth family is trying to salvage what they can from inside their home after a night they'll never forget.
"You could feel the pressure. The windows blew out and you could feel that pressure, extreme pressure," explained homeowner Trenton Ashworth.
Comment: There is good possibility that Tuesday's X-class solar flares, which were expected to hit earth Friday/Saturday, played an important role in charging the ionosphere and setting off discharges like this event, as well as the rich electric storms over Europe on Saturday.
The sun's positively charged 'wind gushes' create big potential differences between pockets of positively charged layers of atmosphere (clouds and dust) and its attracted electrons from below, leading to discharge events. In a nutshell, much in the same way our sun's activity's interaction with earth's conductive environment creates other discharging 'air-spirals' like hurricanes and lightning.
For an interesting and helpful read about our solar systems electromagnetic setup, see Pierre Lescaudron's book:
Two more days of snowfall is expected.
Thanks to Argiris Diamantis for this link
















Comment: Indeed, 'climate change' is underway, but it's not quite turning out the way authorities predicted.
Clearly what's happening on this planet at this time goes way beyond carbon footprints and fossil fuel consumption.
Check out the recent episode of SOTT Talk Radio where we discussed 'Earth Changes' and what 'climate change' is really all about.