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Tue, 26 Oct 2021
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Attention

Signs and Portents: Mutant two-headed pig with two noses and three eyes born in Shaanxi, China

A man holds the two-headed piglet

A man holds the two-headed piglet
This piglet has left farmers baffled after it was born with two heads, two noses and three eyes.

Fears have emerged for the deformed animal's survival following the strange birth on Tuesday at a pig farm in Wangcha, a village in China's Shaanxi province.

Puzzled farmers shared a recording of the mutant piglet, which was born among a litter that is not believed to have suffered the same fate.

Currently, farmers say the piglet is alive - but because of its deformities, it is not known how long it will survive.

Another "mutant piglet" with two bodies and eight legs died minutes after being born on a Chinese farm earlier this month.


Attention

Swimmer attacked by otter in lake at Bear Creek Village, Pennsylvania

otter
A woman swimming in the lake at Bear Creek Village was the victim of an attack so rare that wildlife officials aren't certain on a cause.

She was swimming in the lake on the evening of Aug. 17 when she was bitten three times on the legs by a river otter, according to Game Commission wildlife conservation officer Phil White, who investigated the incident.

The otter followed and bit the swimmer as she made her way to shore and then left once she exited the lake, White said.

White, who declined to release the victim's name, said the swimmer sought treatment for her injuries and received a rabies vaccination as a precaution. Otters aren't uncommon in the area, White said, and the primarily aquatic animals travel through Bear Creek Village on their way to the Francis E. Walter Reservoir.

What is unusual, White added, is for an otter to attack a human.

Tornado1

Category 5 Irma hits Leeward Islands at peak strength, eye misses Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands

Irma hurrican leeward islands
© UW-Madison/CIMSS
Above: VIIRS infrared image of Hurricane Irma taken at 1:35 am EDT Wednesday, September 6, 2017. At the time, the island of Barbuda was in the eye, and Irma was a Category 5 storm with 185 mph winds.
Hurricane Irma smashed into the small Lesser Antilles islands of Barbuda (population 1,638), Saint Barthelemy (population 9,000), Anguilla (population 15,000), and Saint Martin/Sint Maarten (population 8,000/33,000) early Wednesday as a mighty Category 5 hurricane with 185 mph winds. As the front southwestern eyewall of Irma hit, Barbuda reported sustained winds of 118 mph, gusting to 155 mph, before the instrument failed. The minimum pressure in the eye was 916 mb on Barbuda and St. Barthelemy. Preliminary reports from these islands indicate heavy wind and storm surge damage occurred. On Saint Martin, storm surge flooding to rooftop level was observed. Irma brought a storm surge of 7.95 feet (2.42 meters) to Barbuda, according to a Wednesday afternoon blog post by storm surge scientist Dr. Hal Needham. Barbuda has not been heard from yet.

A hurricane with top winds of 185 mph has never been recorded in these islands, and Irma's landfall intensity of 185 mph winds in the Leeward islands is tied with the 1935 Florida Keys Labor Day Hurricane as the highest landfall intensity on record for an Atlantic hurricane (third place globally.) The most recent close analog for Irma may be Hurricane Hugo (1989), which tore through the Leewards and struck Puerto Rico as a Category 4 storm, causing $3 billion in damage (1989 dollars) and 72 deaths.

Cloud Precipitation

Hurricane Irma pummels the Dominican Republic

Palm trees bend in Samana, Dominican Republic, on Thursday, as Irma roared off the northern coast of the island the country shares with Haiti
© Tatiana Fernandez/AP
Palm trees bend in Samana, Dominican Republic, on Thursday, as Irma roared off the northern coast of the island the country shares with Haiti
Irma's strong winds and torrential rains pummeled the Dominican Republic on Thursday, damaging homes and inundating streets in the beach towns on the north coast, according to local media reports.

Among the towns pounded by the storm were Cabarete and Sosua, part of the Puerto Plata region popular with foreign tourists.

More than 5,500 people in the country were evacuated in the run-up to the storm, officials said.


Bizarro Earth

The 275 trillion pounds of water from Hurricane Harvey deformed the earth's crust in Houston

Hurricane Harvey

An aerial photograph reveals the huge swathes of flooded land in Houston, Texas on Sunday. Hurricane Harvey blustered through the town on Friday and Saturday, bringing with it unprecedented downpour and triggering life-threatening floods.
The weight of water can deform the Earth's crust, if there's enough of it. And we can measure that change with the ultraprecise global-positioning satellites humans have launched into orbit.

On Monday, Chris Milliner of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory tweeted a simple map visualizing data from the Nevada Geodetic Laboratory. It showed that the GPS data from special stations around Houston detected that the whole area had been pushed down roughly two centimeters by the weight of the water that fell during Hurricane Harvey.

Fire

Wildfires in Oregon consume over 10,000 acres of forest, haunting images of smoke and ash visible from space

oregon wildfire
© Travis Madison / Facebook
Wildfires are engulfing the Columbia River Gorge in Oregon, with more than 10,000 acres of forest destroyed. The inferno is sending smoke and ash into the sky which is visible from space. Hundreds of people have been forced to evacuate the area.

"The biggest danger isn't necessarily the fire pushing through - it's the ash fall," said Lt. Damon Simmons, spokesman for the Oregon State Fire Marshal's Office, as cited by The Hood River News.

Ash from the fire has reached as far as the Hood River 47 miles (76km) away with massive smoke trails from the inferno visible from space.


The Eagle Creek fire was man-made, has evaded containment and now covers an area of more than 10,000 acres since it broke out Saturday. The fire even jumped the Columbia River to Washington in the early hours of Tuesday morning, reports King 5 News.

Police interviewed a 15-year-old male from Vancouver, Washington they believe started the fire by setting off fireworks on the Eagle Creek Trail.

Snowflake

Over 3 feet of spring snowfall and counting: It's dumping in Australia

All this snow is opening up new options to stomp
© Richard Phillips
All this snow is opening up new options to stomp
As we celebrate the last days of our North American summer, Mother Nature is showing no signs of slowing up winter in the Southern Hemisphere, even though they're already seven days into spring.

In the past week, it's dumped over three feet of sweet white fluffy stuff at Perisher Resort in Australia.

Temperatures have been brisk and sitting below zero, helping to make this snow extra cold and light; perfect for faceshots, pow slashes, and big sends.

Perisher is experiencing one of the best seasons they've had in the past five years. When this storm is all said and done, it could break a few records in terms of snow depth.

This recent snowfall is the icing on top of the other storms they've had this season, as over six feet of powder has falling in August alone.


Comment: See also: Australia shivers through coldest start to September EVER: Freezing weather and record Spring snowfall turns coastal towns white


Bizarro Earth

Category 5 Hurricane Irma stronger than all of 2017's other eight Atlantic storms combined

Hurricane Irma

The Category 5 storm is breaking records and headed towards Puerto Rico and the Bahamas. Florida may be next.
Hurricane Irma's winds are stronger than if you were to add up all of the winds of the prior eight storms Atlantic storms together at maximum intensity.

That's just one shattering measure of the storm's strength from meteorologist Phil Klotzbach, research scientist at Colorado State University's Department of Atmospheric Science. Irma's 185 mph winds make it the strongest storm on record in the Atlantic Ocean outside of the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico, according to Klotzbach's research, which he shared with The Daily Beast.

"Most of the other storms this season were pretty weak and short-lived. While Harvey was intense, it was intense for a short time period before making landfall," Klotzbach said.

Snowflake

Georgia gets its first snowfall three months before the start of winter

Tetnuldi is the newest ski resort in Georgia
© Nick Phaliani
Tetnuldi is the newest ski resort in Georgia
The newest of Georgia's winter resorts, Tetnuldi in Svaneti region in the western part of the country, has experienced its very first snowfall this year today even though winter is almost three months away.

The first snowfall at Tetnuldi has been described as a light dusting and is believed not to last long, but in the coolest months snowfall can be very high and can reach several metres.

Weather experts forecast slushy snow may fall in other mountainous regions of Georgia in the coming days, but despite this, citizens are being advised not to dig out their winter coats just yet as daytime temperatures around the country are set to rise.

Tornado1

Tropical triple threat: Hurricanes Katia & Jose follow on the heels of Irma

hurricanes katia jose
© NASA
Hurricanes Katia and Jose
Two other giant storms - Katia and Jose - have grown to hurricane levels, and now trail the calamitous Category 5 Hurricane Irma, which has battered the Caribbean and is headed toward the southern coast of Florida.

Katia, a Category 1 hurricane as of Wednesday evening, is in the Gulf of Mexico and is expected to make landfall in Mexico late Friday or early Saturday.

The storm is forecast to produce up to 10 inches of rain, with the possibility of 15 inches in northern Veracruz, according to the National Hurricane Center.

"This rainfall may cause life-threatening flash floods and mudslides, especially in areas of mountainous terrain," NHC said.

For comparison, Hurricane Harvey unloaded over 50 inches of rain east of Houston, Texas last week.