Earth Changes
As the hurricane churns closer to the U.S. coast, its path becomes more certain, with South Florida, particularly the Keys, increasingly likely to take a hit. Tropical storm force winds could arrive as early as Friday. Gov. Rick Scott has declared a state of emergency for all 67 counties and has all 7,000 members of the state's National Guard to report to duty on Friday.
UPDATE: Irma's winds have intensified. To read the latest, see http://www.miamiherald.com/news/weather/hurricane/article171330777.html
Because Irma is so large, forecasters urged caution in paying too much attention to its exact track. The storm is continuing to roll west at 14 mph, with winds expected to begin battering the Leeward Islands today. A powerful high pressure ridge is steering the storm and will likely stay in place over the next few days, forecasters said. In five days, a trough moving across the U.S. should begin weakening the western edge of the ridge, allowing the storm to slide north. Where Irma makes the turn will determine impacts to Florida.
According to reports, Anjulata Sahoo, wife of Bijay Kumar Sahoo of Bankataragadia village had taken the goats for grazing them near the house. At around 3 pm when rain started with lightning and thunder, she stood under a tree after keeping the goats under another tree.
The goats were killed in the lightning.
Despite MeT prediction about possibility of lightning and thunder in some of the districts every day, the casualties are still taking place in the state.
Yesterday, Sept. 5, 2017, the volcano started spewing a column of ash 1,000 meters above its crater, reported the National University's Volcanology and Seismology Observatory (Ovsicori-UNA).
Ash has been flowing out of the crater since yesterday, and ashfall has been reported in areas to the north and northwest of the volcano in Coronado, Moravia, and San Isidro de Heredia.
The plume of gas, steam, aerosols and ash is rising out of the colossus' western crater.
With Monday's strong earthquakes and Tuesday's airplane crash in the headlines, it seems Costa Rica's Turrialba felt it was the right week to join in on the drama.
France has requisitioned planes and sent in emergency food and water rations.
The regional authority for Guadeloupe and neighboring islands said in a statement Wednesday that the fire station in Saint Barthelemy is under more than 3 feet of water and no rescue vehicles can move.
They said the government headquarters in Saint Martin is partially destroyed and the island is in a total blackout.
Electricity is also partially down on the larger island of Guadeloupe, where the threat receded, despite the danger of heavy flooding.
They do recommend looking for an unusual display of the aurora-the northern lights caused by a disturbance of the magnetosphere-in areas of the U.S. not used to seeing them.
"The big takeaway from this level of storming would be just increased chance of seeing the aurora, really in the upper tier of the United States," says Robert Rutledge, lead of operations at the center, which is part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. (Here's an animation of the CME from NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory.)

A massive dump of snow led to one home being 'snowed in', with this incredible photo showing the severity of the snowfall
While Winter may have come and gone for almost every other state, the mainland's south-east has been lashed by massive amounts of snowfall in the past 24 hours.
But while it's not unusual for a blanketing to hit mountain areas this time of year, the chilly temperatures have seen coastal towns such as Lorne and Apollo Bay turned to white and some homes incredibly 'snowed-in'.
Incredible images posted to social media show the thickness of snow which covered parts of the state on Tuesday.
Towns at sea level turned white with alpine areas receiving up to 30 centimetres and the temperature dropping to as low as -7.5 degrees.
The cold snap caught out two men who found themselves stuck in their vehicle high in the alps for three days before being rescued by the Victorian SES.

When the family in the house first awoke, they thought the sounds downstairs were home invaders.
A call to 911 followed but when officers arrived, they found a catastrophe that wasn't man-made.
A sinkhole had developed under the Mountain View Drive home in Falmouth and the danger was created by Mother Nature.
'Everyone is safe'
Chris Strickey lives at the house with his wife and two daughters who are 13 and 16. He and his 13-year-old daughter weren't home at the time the sinkhole opened.
"I received a phone call at one minute before 4 a.m. from my wife to tell me that literally the house had collapsed," said Strickey.
Heller makes fun of the ridiculous predictions by so-called climate scientists about the Arctic melting, pointing out that leading experts from Canada, Norway and the United States were calling for an ice-free North Pole for the summer of 2008.
These ridiculous predictions lead an explorer to try to kayak to the North Pole in 2008.

A member of the emergency operations committee monitors the trajectory of Hurricane Irma in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.
Leeward Islands of Antigua and Barbuda braced for category 5 storm, which then heads for Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, Haiti, Cuba and Florida
The most powerful Atlantic Ocean hurricane in recorded history bore down on the islands of the north-east Caribbean on Tuesday night local time, following a path predicted to then rake Puerto Rico, the Dominican Republic, Haiti and Cuba before possibly heading for Florida over the weekend.
At the far north-eastern edge of the Caribbean, authorities on the Leeward Islands of Antigua and Barbuda cut power and urged residents to shelter indoors as they braced for Hurricane Irma's first contact with land early on Wednesday.
Officials warned people to seek protection from Irma's "onslaught" in a statement that closed with: "May God protect us all."
The category 5 storm had maximum sustained winds of 185mph (295kph) by early Tuesday evening, according to the US National Hurricane Center (NHC) in Miami.
A spectacular phenomenon took place on National Day today as members of the public throughout the state observed a 22° halo around the sun, with many taking the opportunity to snap photos of it to share on social media.
The optical phenomenon was observed in Kuching and Miri, with double rainbows forming a large circular ring around the sun as early as 11am on National Day.
Vehicles were also seen moving slowly as drivers and passengers tried to capture shots of the phenomenon.











