Earth Changes
Eight cattle and a horse on separate farms near Omberg in the Östergötland region have died from splenic fever, as it is also called, after the first case of anthrax was confirmed by agricultural experts last month.
They are located a couple of kilometres apart, and officials from Sweden's National Veterinary Institute are currently working on vaccinating livestock and tracing the source of the infection.
"It is of course a loss to the owner of the animals and a concern for the surrounding area. We know that there is an increased risk that each case could spread locally," Karl Ståhl told the Swedish newswire TT.
It has not been confirmed what caused the outbreak, but there have been other incidents in the region during the 20th century.
An elk which was found dead in the area in 1927 carried the infection, according to the National Veterinary Institute.
Traces of the bacteria that cause the infection can survive for decades.
Liverpool-born mum Elaine Riozzi-Bodine says her son Ethan is being hailed a 'walking miracle' after his dice with death near their house in New Jersey, USA.
Mrs Riozzi-Bodine, 47, said that the 16-year-old lad had been walking home along the seafront when a bolt of lightning hit the ground beside him.
Ethan was thrown off his feet as a jolt ran through the ground and then up his body.
He was rushed to hospital where doctors were stunned to discover he was completely uninjured.

Traffic cameras captured a large white flash before the man, identified only by his surname Han, is seen falling backwards
The man, who has only been identified by his surname Han, had been standing on his boat in Suzhou, eastern China, when he was killed in the freak accident.
Traffic cameras captured a large white flash before the fisherman is seen falling backwards on his boat.
Han's boat was among many docked near a bridge in the district of Wujiang, Jiangsu Province, during the storm, which brought large amounts of rainfall and thunder.
Despite the risk, locals said they had not expected the lightning strike which killed Han.

Calgary and area pummelled again, this time by a powerful hail storm that has left widespread damage over the weekend.
Residents said the hail started pounding on their homes at around 5:45 p.m.
"It sounded like if you are in a small room with a closed door and like 10 or 15 people hit around the room," Abul Kashem, who was taking pictures of the damaged siding on this home on Taravista Drive, said.
People living on Tarawood Road watched, as the golf ball sized hail crashed down on their homes and cars.
"Everybody was excited and scared at the same time. I saw some people getting out of their house and trying to cover their cars to try to avoid the damage," Gaurav Singh said. His car's windshield was cracked by the hail.
"The hail was pretty big. Almost half of my fist. Many of them were half of my fist size," Singh said.

Visitors and residents in St Ives scramble for cover from the rain as 'Awful August' gets off to a wet start
August will get off to a chilly, bright start in the North with rain over parts of the South feeding into a changeable seven days, the Met Office said.
Today will be mostly cloudy in the South with rain moving in from the West, which will turn heavy and persistent this afternoon.
It will be predominantly cloudy tomorrow across the UK with outbreaks of rain extending north and some sunny intervals possible in the South.
Southern areas will be mostly dry on Wednesday with sunny spells and the odd shower, although there will be widespread showers in the North.
"We're just trying to get people out of the way now," Bitterroot National Forest spokesman Tod McKay told the Missoulian newspaper. "We can rebuild homes. We need to get people out of this area."
The wildfire -- dubbed the "Roaring Lion Fire" -- Sunday afternoon is at least a half square mile and is heading up Roaring Lion Road in the Bitterroot National Forest and down the canyon, officials said.
CBS Helena affiliate KXLH-TV reports more than 2,000 acres have burned so far.
The speed of the has left locals in shock, KXLH reports. By conservative estimates, the fire was growing at a rate of 200 acres per hour after it started early Sunday afternoon. Driven by gusty downslope winds funneled right down the valley, the fire was racing through the foothills southwest of Hamilton.
Structures in the Judd Creek area have been lost to the wildfire southwest of Hamilton, Ravalli County Sheriff Chris Hoffman told the Missoulian.

A destroyed home is seen after the Soberanes Fire burned through the Palo Colorado area, north of Big Sur, California, U.S. July 31, 2016.
The blaze is currently threatening thousands of homes. Overnight it grew to an area of 59 square miles (153 square kilometers), about the size of San Francisco, according to the California department of forestry and fire protection. Authorities have ordered 300 more homes to be evacuated.
Firefighters were able to contain only 15 percent of the blaze by Sunday morning. Overnight, it destroyed 57 homes and eleven outbuildings. Officials warned that it could be another month before the blaze is completely extinguished.
The twister struck the Yen Phong District of the northern Bac Ninh Province on Thursday, causing buildings to collapse, trees to fall and parasols to go flying.
The shocking footage was captured by a dashcam as the driver slowly reverses out of the tornado's dangerous path.
While no one was killed in the wild winds, they left the town looking like an Ikea flatpack wasteland.
Quang Tung, an engineer working close by, told local media the tornado could be seen from 2.5 miles (4km) away.
2016-08-01 07:42:50 UTC
UTC time: Monday, August 01, 2016 07:42 AM
Your time: 2016-08-01T07:42:50Z
Magnitude Type: mb
USGS page: M 6.1 - South Indian Ocean
USGS status: Reviewed by a seismologist
Reports from the public: 0 people
The big bird then pecked at the phone a few times, then flew off with the device, which hasn't been seen since and was probably dumped in the ocean, according to the victim, Lt. Andres Ayure.
"That was my 'welcome to Dutch Harbor' story," said Ayure, supervisor of the Marine Safety Detachment in Unalaska, who'd only arrived three days earlier. Three days later, on a Saturday, he decided to enjoy his day off by hiking Ballyhoo Mountain and climbed to the top of the 1,634-foot peak, which overlooks the airport.
The hike to the top was pleasant enough, and Ayure saw other people as he climbed. He was wearing shorts and an American Eagle-brand hooded sweatshirt. When he was about a quarter-way down, an eagle swooped him three times, only missing him because he managed to duck, but made contact on the fourth attack.












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