Earth Changes
Police and emergency services were called to Orsa Rovdjurspark at 10:30 on Friday morning after one of the zookeepers was attacked and seriously injured. The man, who was born in 1998, received medical attention at the scene but later died of his injuries.
The CEO of the company that owns the park explained that the attack took place during a special activity for guests, where people get to go into an enclosure with the zookeepers. The enclosure was supposed to be empty, but the bear managed to get in. Police believe it may have dug its way in.
"First and foremost I want to say that this is a difficult day. I'm thinking about my colleague and his family a lot. It started out as a normal day, a family had booked the activity and normal routines were followed. I'll leave it to the police to work out what went wrong," the park's head Sven Brunberg said at a press conference on Friday.
Earlier this week national forecaster SMHI issued a class one weather warning (the least serious on a scale from one to three) for heavy rain in Skåne, noting that there was a risk of stormwater drains overflowing and cellars flooding, and their prediction proved to be accurate.
According to preliminary figures from the forecaster as much as 36 millimetres of rain fell in some parts of Skåne on Thursday.
One video by local newspaper Sydsvenskan showed cars ploughing through deep water on a main road.

Two people are already confirmed dead and a further nine are missing after the typhoon smashed Kyushu and surrounding areas
Two people are already confirmed dead and a further nine are missing after the typhoon smashed Kyushu and surrounding areas.
Typhoon Noru registered as the world's strongest storm at one point last week, is threatening up to 800mm of rainfall in the next 48 hours.
It has been a typhoon for 13 days, the longest hurricane-strength typhoon since Hurricane Ioke, the strongest storm ever recorded in the Central-Pacific.
The Amami island chain, located just south of the southwest main island of Kyushu and some 1,350 km (840 miles) from Tokyo, will be hit by high winds and heavy rains from Friday.
The monster storm is easily visible from the International Space Station, with stunning images showing Noru from 250km in the sky.

The sinkhole opened up over Sunday night in Örnsköldsvik.
Workers at the Domsjö factory in Örnsköldsvik raised the alarm on Sunday evening after they noticed a hole emering in the ground near the building. It grew during the night to a substantial size.
"It's about eight metres by eight metres in size. The depth is unknown," Håkan Wiberg, unit head at Örnsköldsvik emergency services told The Local.
And scientists say this year's dead zone is the biggest they've recorded since mapping began in 1985.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced this week that the Gulf dead zone measured in at more than 8,700 square miles — an area roughly the size of New Jersey.
Dead zones can occur naturally. But researchers say the Gulf's problem is mainly caused by nutrient pollution from agriculture.
Sources

The British Geological Survey (BGS) recorded the magnitude 3.8 tremor in the Moidart area just before 3.45pm
The British Geological Survey (BGS) recorded the magnitude 3.8 tremor in the Moidart area just before 3.45pm.
It was the biggest earthquake in the region since a magnitude 4.1 quake near Oban in September 1986, officials noted.
On the latest event, the BGS stated: 'This earthquake was felt widely across the west of Scotland.'
People in the area shared their experience of the rumble on Twitter.
One wrote: 'Think I just experienced a minor earthquake, here on Ardnamurchan. West coast of Scotland. Anyone else feel it, my kitchen rumbled.'
Italy, Switzerland, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro, Croatia, Slovenia, and Serbia are on red alert, European forecast network Meteoalarm said on Saturday.
Florence's famous Uffizi Gallery was temporarily closed on Friday after the museum's air conditioning system broke down, ANSA news agency reported.
Greece, Spain, Bulgaria, France, Macedonia, Slovakia, and Moldova have issued orange alerts to stress the potential for worsening weather conditions.
At least two people have died from the heat, one in Romania and one in Poland, Reuters reported, adding that many more have been taken to the hospital for sunstroke.
"In two hours of my shift today I saw four people fainting on the street and complaining of heat exhaustion," a traffic warden told Reuters in Belgrade.
A helicopter rescue team hoisted one man to safety as muddy water flowed down the roadway, said Los Angeles County Fire Inspector Gustavo Medina. Aerial footage showed him sitting on top of his black truck, water up to its wheels, before the rescue.
Some people were stuck at a pharmacy because of extreme flooding, while others reported being trapped in their cars in knee-high water.
"All the roadways look like a lake," said Sheriff's Lt. Anthony Gunn, warning commuters to avoid attempting to drive through moving water. "If possible, [do] not drive anywhere at this point."
The freaky, fast-moving cloud formation packed powerful wind gusts.
KSBW Facebook fan Ingrid Schmidt-Wagnaar said, "All of a sudden the trees were bending. Waves of the fog (were) wafting through the garden and it got a bit chilly, whereas it was a balmy 85 degree just moments ago. It was over in less than 3 minutes, and blue sky was again upon us, and it got warm again. Nature's phenomenon."
Santa Cruz resident Ian Babcock was the first to describe it as a "fognado."












Comment: Flash flood traps drivers in Acton, California; 1.5 inches of rain in just half an hour