Earth Changes
The earthquake was recorded at around 10:18 p.m. Pacific and KTVU viewers say they felt it as far away as Redwood City.
"Felt the Eureka earthquake all the way down here in Redwood City. Friends up there say shaking lasted 30-60 seconds," wrote viewer Kristopher Rowberry on KTVU's Facebook page.
USGS seismologist Susan Hoover says more than 300 people have reported feeling the temblor on their website as of 10:49 p.m., according to the Associated Press.
By 11:15 p.m., that number had increased to 1300 people.
2014-03-10 05:18:12 UTC
2014-03-09 21:18:12 UTC-08:00 at epicenter
Location
40.821°N 125.128°W depth=7.0km (4.3mi)
Nearby Cities
77km (48mi) WNW of Ferndale, California
81km (50mi) W of Eureka, California
85km (53mi) WNW of Fortuna, California
87km (54mi) W of McKinleyville, California
398km (247mi) NW of Sacramento, California
Technical Details
You can't see this in the video since I was filming with my phone which has shitty camera. When I stepped on that frozen pond, farther away from that waterhole (where I was standing) ice was 20 centimeters thick or even more. And that waterhole looked like it was melted with fire or something... You can see around that waterhole that there is snow or maybe ice particles blasted away from the center of this waterhole.
Background
The authors write that "severe floods triggered by intense precipitation are among the most destructive natural hazards in Alpine environments, frequently causing large financial and social damage," and they say that "potential enhanced flood occurrence due to global climate change would thus increase threats to settlements, infrastructure, and human lives in the affected regions." However, they note that, currently, "projections of intense precipitation exhibit major uncertainties" and that "robust reconstructions of Alpine floods are limited to the instrumental and historical period," giving one reason to question whether global warming would lead to such a consequence.
What was done
In a study designed to reduce these uncertainties and extend reconstructions back in time beyond the instrumental period, Glur et al. developed "a multi-archive Alpine flood reconstruction based on ten lacustrine sediment records, covering the past 2500 years." More specifically, they studied ten lakes situated north of the Central Alpine arc along a montane-to-Alpine transect, spanning an elevation gradient from 447 to 2068 m asl," which allowed "the extraction of a synoptic, rather than a merely local rainfall signal revealed by a single-lake study." And to verify their approach to the subject, they compared the last 500 years of their Central Alpine flood reconstruction with an independently established flood record for that period that was based on historical documents, as developed and described by Schmocker-Fackel and Naef (2010).
What was learned
"Regarding the best-characterized climatic periods during the past 2500 years," the eight researchers report that "flood activity was generally enhanced during the Little Ice Age (1430-1850 C.E.; LIA) compared to the Medieval Climate Anomaly (950-1250 C.E.; MCA)." And they say that "this result is confirmed by other studies documenting an increased (decreased) flood activity during the LIA (MCA) in the Alps," citing the studies of Schmocker-Fackel and Naef (2010), Czymzik et al. (2010), Wilhelm et al. (2012) and Swierczynski et al. (2012).
A woman was stung more than 1,000 times after being attacked by a swarm of 75,000 killer bees.
Reports say the 71-year-old woman was sat in her car when she was completely covered by Africanized honey bees.
Five firefighters were also hurt as they cleared the swarm in a gated community in Palm Desert, California.
The 75,000 hybrid bees - who are known to attack when they feel threatened - are believed to have been living in a buried cable box.
Local TV station KCBS-TV reported the woman was taken to a local hospital where she was recovering from serious injuries.
Three firefighters were also taken to hospital to be treated for more minor injuries.

In this September 2013 photo, members of a prefectural committee on the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant inspect tanks holding toxic water at the tsunami-crippled plant in Okuma town, Fukushima prefecture, Japan.
But Buesseler and other scientists are calling for more monitoring. No federal agency currently samples Pacific Coast seawater for radiation, he said."I'm not trying to be alarmist," Buesseler said. "We can make predictions, we can do models. But unless you have results, how will we know it's safe?"
The temperature reached 19 Celsius at the De Bilt weather station near Hilversum on Sunday afternoon - the highest March 9 temperature ever recorded. Saturday was also a record-breaking day.
In southern and eastern parts of the country, the temperature tipped 20 Celsius. In Maastricht it reached almost 22 Celsius while in Twente and Eindhoven, it almost reached 21.
The following video contains footage of some of the extreme weather, fireballs and seismic activity from around the world in February. Think the weather's crazy where you live? Check out what's happening elsewhere...
January's 'polar vortex' returned to bury most of the US in snow... despite a record number of 'winter wildfires' breaking out as far north as Oregon.
Mount Sinabung in Indonesia erupted spectacularly... then a string of volcanoes followed the ensuing pyroclastic cloud down the mountain, while another major volcanic eruption occurred in Ecuador.
Severe flooding, tidal surges and hurricane force winds hit Western Europe, while Eastern Europe was hit by heavy snow and ice-storms.
A wildfire broke out in Wales between winter storms... as Atlanta, Georgia was knocked out by snow.
There were record snowfalls in Iran and Tokyo, more 'strange sky sounds' and the Great Lakes almost completely froze over.
A waterspout was filmed off the Australian coast, a major heatwave hit Brazil, and sinkholes opened up all over UK...
Is this normal?!
The USGS claims that the magnitude 5.0 earthquake triggered by waste-water injection the previous day "trigger[ed] a cascade of earthquakes, including a larger one, [which] has important implications for reducing the seismic risk from waste-water injection."
Injection wells are considered by some to be the most environmentally sound method of disposing of waste-water - which is a byproduct of both hydrofracking and conventional oil production - because they use the earth itself to both filter and contain the pollution.
The decade-long explosion of energy-producing facilities in the central United States has, according to a recent article in the journal Geology, led to an 11-fold increase in the number of earthquakes occurring in areas that are typically tectonically calm, including Arkansas, Texas, Ohio, and Colorado in the past four years alone.
The 5.7 magnitude quake in Prague followed an injection of waste-water approximately 650 feet away from the Wilzetta fault zone, a complex fault system about 124 miles in length. All three earthquakes exhibited a slip-strike motion, and did so at three different locations, indicating that three separate areas of the fault zone were activated.

This incredible footage of a mega-pod dolphin stampede was captured off the Californian coast by drone
Drone footage has captured some breathtaking footage of stampeding dolphins and a baby humpback whale.
Captain Dave Anderson of Capt Dave's Dolphin and Whale Safari in Dana Point, California, recently filmed a five-minute video with a drone of a huge mega-pod of thousands of common dolphins stampeding off Dana Point, three gray whales migrating together down the coast off San Clemente, California, and heartwarming close-ups hovering over a newborn humpback whale calf snuggling with its mum as an escort whale stands guard nearby, in Maui.
According to the information uploaded by Dolphin Safari with the video on YouTube, Southern California has the greatest density of dolphins in the world. It has pods up to 10,000 strong "stretched out for miles like the wildebeests of Africa". There are over 400,000 common dolphin alone, and it's also home to the largest concentration of blue whales on earth.











