Earth Changes
But Grand Bayou is forsaken these days, 30 months after Hurricane Katrina washed over it and dragged one of Louisiana's last authentic outposts of bayou culture into a world defined by insurers, money lenders, building code enforcers and government auditors.
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| ©AFP/NASA |
Winter storms have devastated the Pacific Northwest's popular national parks each of the past two years, causing damage that has run into the millions of dollars.
The low visibility on Interstate 40 near Flagstaff caused about 20 collisions, which occurred over a stretch of highway at least 4 miles long around noon, Flagstaff Fire Department Chief Mark Wilson said.
He described the wrecks as clumps of vehicles piled on top of each other, involving cars, trucks and semis.
"The magnitude of it was pretty severe," Wilson said. "We had a whiteout scene with the snow, and obviously a single-vehicle accident caused multiple-vehicle accidents, which continued to pile up due to the low visibility."
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| ©REUTERS/Tami Chappell |
| Debris are cleared away from a building in downtown Atlanta, Georgia March 15, 2008. |
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| ©Keith Sockman |
| Newly hatched Lincoln's sparrows. |
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| ©NOAA |
| U.S. winter temperature highlights. |
The magnitude 6.2 quake was centered 190 miles southwest of Banda Aceh on the island of Sumatra, the U.S. Geological Survey said.











Comment: For a more in-depth look at the "eroding of the bayou culture", have a peek at Naomi Kline's book The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism HERE.