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Tue, 26 Oct 2021
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Surfer bitten by shark at New Smyrna Beach, Florida

SHARK BITE
© Kem McNair
Shark bite
A 17-year-old boy was bitten by a shark Saturday while surfing at New Smyrna Beach, Volusia Beach Safety officials said.

Capt. Mike Berard said the boy was surfing near the inlet just before noon when a shark bit his right hand.

John Brown, of Winter Garden, was there when it all happened and made the call to 911.

"As I'm scanning with the binoculars, there's this kid that comes straight to me, with his hand flowing blood from where he got bit," he said. "The kid said, 'I was on the surfboard coming into the whitewater and jumped off the board and landed right on the shark.' He said the shark bit his hand, and he was trying to rip his hand out. He punched him two or three times, and he let go and came straight out."


Seismograph

Magnitude 6 earthquake in the unpopulated South Sandwich Islands Region

Map courtesy Alomax.free.net - Star: calculated epicenter - Small red dots: possible error margin for the epicenter, the more dense, the higher probability that the epicenter will be in that area. Orange circle: epicenter location error zone
© Alomax.free.net
Star: calculated epicenter - Small red dots: possible error margin for the epicenter, the more dense, the higher probability that the epicenter will be in that area. Orange circle: epicenter location error zone
Most important Earthquake Data:

Magnitude : 6

Local Time (conversion only below land) : 2017-09-04 06:07:39

GMT/UTC Time : 2017-09-04 08:07:39

Depth (Hypocenter) : 65 km

Update 09:25 UTC: earthquake in the subantarctic penguin volcanic islands region. This is an unpopulated area of the world, so no impact at all on human beings :)

Fire

Wildfires burning more than half a million acres in Montana

Montana wildfires
© U.S. Forest Service Photo/InciWeb
In southeastern Montana, a wind-driven wildfire ripped through parched forest and grasslands, forcing the evacuation of an undetermined number of ranches and homes, officials said Thursday.
As the country keeps its eyes trained on Houston, another natural disaster is ravaging states far to the north.

With red flag warnings covering 200,000 square miles of Montana, Idaho, Wyoming and the Dakotas saying the danger for new wildfires is imminent, firefighters continue to battle blazes that have burned huge swaths of land.

This summer has been particularly dry and windy for our northern neighbors and a lack of moisture and unfortunate weather has led to hundreds of wildfires burning across Montana, Idaho and northern California.

Rainfall at this point hasn't been much help; lightning strikes on Wednesday sparked at least 40 more in a state already on fire, according to the Great Falls Tribune. High winds are pushing the fires and helping them spread.

Firefighter Brent M. Witham of Mentone, California, died in early August after a tree fell on the 29-year-old.

Smoke is so heavy in Montana that planes couldn't fly over the fires to check their size or status, the Tribune said on Wednesday.

Back in July, Gov. Steve Bullock declared a state of emergency in Montana. The declaration was issued July 24, sometime after the federal government denied the state's request for aid. Three days later, the feds reversed their decision and sent FEMA in to help.

Sun

Despite historically wet winter, Oregon moving toward drought

Oregon heat wave
© MOLLY J. SMITH / Statesman Journal
Boats on the Willamette River on Saturday, Sept. 2, 2017, near Salem's Riverfront Park. The high for Saturday was forecast for 104 degrees; the National Weather Service issued a heat advisory lasting until Tuesday.
Salem recorded its hottest August temperatures since records started being kept in 1893.

The five warmest Augusts have taken place in the last five years, said David Elson, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service - Portland.

"It's pretty clear that something is going on that we are changing our climate," said Kathie Dello, deputy director of the Oregon Climate Service at Oregon State University. "We're seeing climate change impacts already and we need to think about resiliency toward these 100-degree days."

The hot, dry conditions in the Mid-Willamette Valley are a result of a persistent pattern of the growing drier conditions and lack of rain.

Salem recorded just .15 inch of rain on August 13 - the only day there was precipitation in August.

Average rainfall for Salem in August is .45 inches.

The National Weather Service issued a heat advisory that will remain in effect until 10 p.m. Tuesday. Temperatures are expected to creep into the high 90s on Sunday, hover around 100 degrees on Monday and may reach 103 degrees on Tuesday.

"Normal temperatures would be around 80 degrees around this time of year," Elson said. "We'll be in the ballpark for record temperatures in the next few days."

Oregon is abnormally dry and on the cusp of drought conditions, according to the National Drought Mitigation Center.

Tornado1

Powerful Hurricane Irma could be next weather disaster - UPDATE

Tropical storm Irma
© NASA
A handout photo made available by NASA shows an image acquired by the joint NASA/NOAA Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership (NPP) satellite of then Tropical Storm Irma in the Eastern Atlantic Ocean, on 30 August 2017
While much of the United States' focus is still on Texas and the destruction left behind by Hurricane Harvey and its historic rainfall, powerful Hurricane Irma is rapidly intensifying in the open Atlantic and poses a major threat to the Caribbean and potentially the United States next week. Irma was named as a tropical storm on Wednesday morning and by Thursday afternoon it had strengthened into a large Category 3 hurricane, with winds of 115 mph.

Such explosive strengthening is known as "rapid intensification," defined by the National Hurricane Center as having its wind speed increase at least 30 knots (35 mph) in 24 hours. "Irma has become an impressive hurricane," the National Hurricane Center said on Thursday, noting the rapid intensification, and saying "this is a remarkable 50 knot [58 mph] increase from yesterday at this time."

Hurricane Harvey underwent rapid intensification last week, just before landfall, which brought it from a tropical storm to a Category 4 hurricane when it moved onshore near Corpus Christi.Irma is a classic "Cape Verde hurricane," a type of hurricane that forms in the far eastern Atlantic, near the Cape Verde Islands (now known as the Cabo Verde Islands) and tracks all the way across the Atlantic.

Comment: Images of Irma's possible path:
hurricane irma
© WEATHERBELL
Computer model "spaghetti" plot showing track projections for Hurricane Irma


hurricane irma
© nhc.noaa.gov
Update (Sept. 2)

Irma's path is still uncertain - normal for hurricanes while they're still traversing the Atlantic towards the coast. On average, there's a 194-mile margin of error in five-day forecasts. As usual, predictions are only as good as the models and initial conditions used to produce them. And no model is perfect. For example, here are the predicted tracks from Sept. 1st (NOAA):
irma hoaa tracks
And another set from Sept. 2:
irma tracks
The National Hurricane Center predicts Irma will be "extremely dangerous" for the next few days, but it's too early to say whether it will make landfall.

Update (Sept. 3)

The Weather Channel reports that Irma has strengthened into a Category 3 hurricane. Additional strengthening is expected as Irma moves westward in the week ahead. Irma will move close to the Leeward Islands and Puerto Rico by the middle of this week, and then near or north of Hispaniola, the Turks and Caicos and Bahamas late week into next weekend.

Hurricane Irma Sept 3
© Weather Channel
Projected Path and Intensity
It remains far too soon to speculate on eventual potential U.S. impact, but East Coast residents should monitor closely. Meanwhile the NWS has warned about fake hurricane forecasts.

One such fake forecast has been shared on social media almost 40,000 times. The official NOAA emblem was cut and pasted to make it look genuine. It depicts Irma's predicted path to impact the U.S.

Fake Hurricane Irma forecast
© WPIX 11, New York
Fake Hurricane Irma forecast.



Info

Strange brain-looking creatures spotted in Vancouver, Canada

Pectinatella magnifica
© Briita Orwick/USFWS 2012
Low water levels revealed the strange jelly creatures at Stanley Park in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Within Stanley Park's "Lost Lagoon," a strange amorphous blob of life has appeared. The gelatinous "brain" is known as the Pectinatella magnifica, or, more commonly, the "magnificent" bryozoan. What appears to be a single alien organism is instead the gelatinous gathering of hundreds of individual bryozoan "zooids." At a fraction of a millimeter each, it takes a lot of them to form into these oddly cerebral communities.

The gelatinous creatures are hermaphrodites, possessing all requisite reproductive organs within each individual. They spread from their gelatinous communal clumps via "statoblast," where clumps of cells are detached from a zooid that can reproduce themselves asexually to form another brain-like colony. Fossil records have placed ancestors of the modern bryozoan as far back as 470 million years, but they have never been spotted outside of areas east of the Mississippi River.

Arrow Down

Huge landslide filmed on Shimla-Dhalli bypass, India

Major landslide in Shimla after heavy rainfall in Shimla on Saturday
© Pradeep Kumar
Major landslide in Shimla after heavy rainfall in Shimla on Saturday
Incessant rains for the past two days, which had paralysed life in Shimla and several other towns across Himachal Pradesh, triggered a massive landslide on the Shimla-Dhalli-Bhatta Kuffar bypass road Saturday.

Nearly half a dozen vehicles marked along the road, just next to Dhalli traffic tunnel, were damaged in the landslide. People witness to the landslide, whose video also went viral on social media,saw cars flying in the air after hit by the landslide.

Residents living in Bhatta Kuffar area were also stranded on the other side after the landslide completely blocked the road.

However, Deputy Commissioner, Shimla, Rohan Chand Thakur said no deaths were reported.

"Approximately 7 to 8 vehicles dulled in the debris.Three houses also developed cracks and a temple also came in the grip of the falling rock debris. The owners of the houses and tenants have been temporarily rehabilitated," he said .


Snowflake

Snow recorded on August 31st at Laurentides Wildlife Reserve, Quebec

Snow
© XtremChaseQuebec
Snow in Quebec
The fall seems to be in a hurry to settle in Quebec, while some regions have already experienced, in the night from Thursday to Friday, their first fall of snow, particularly in the Laurentides wildlife Reserve.

A few flakes fell on the road 175 as evidenced by the images captured by the hunter of storms Mathieu Bordage on the approach of the Stage, half-way between the Quebec region and the Saguenay - Lac-Saint-Jean.

In the morning, the mercury ranged between 1 and 3 degrees, resulting in some snow showers, without, however, that it accumulates on the ground. A white carpet was still visible on vegetation.

"This is not common, but this is not abnormal either, it is already seen. The month of September, it is autumn that is settling and we have less sun so the temperature difference increases between the nights become quite cold, and the days remain comfortable," said Amélie Bertrand, meteorologist at Environment Canada.

In such conditions, the mountainous terrain are more likely to receive a few flakes.


Info

Mysterious 'trumpet' sound emanates from Iranian sky

A strange sound resembling a trumpet was apparently heard by people in the vicinity of the coastal city of Astara in Iran on August 28.


While some people immediately started speculating about the nature of this mysterious phenomenon, a number of skeptics have already commented on YouTube that the video may be a hoax and that the strange sound could be the product of montage.

Snowflake

Snow already! Mount Washington in New Hampshire gets its first taste of winter

It's a beautiful, but chilly start to the day on the summit of Mount Washington!
© Mount Washington Observatory
It's a beautiful, but chilly start to the day on the summit of Mount Washington!
The Mount Washington Observatory has recorded snowfall on top of Mount Washington on Friday!

According to the observatory's Facebook page, the snow was brought in by 25 degree temperatures and hurricane force winds.

The first taste of winter brings mixed reviews from residents and tourists. Some can't wait to strap on their ski gear, others are cherishing the warm weather while it lasts.

Officials from the observatory say the first recorded snowfall usually comes toward the end of September, but snow this early is not uncommon. In fact, snow has fallen on the summit every month of the year at some point.

Between mid-July to early August, the temperatures on the summit are usually around 49 degrees.