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Tue, 19 Oct 2021
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Geologist Says New Orleans Sinking

ST. LOUIS - A geologist from the stable heart of North America caused a stir in the Big Easy when he urged on national television that New Orleans be abandoned.

Timothy Kusky of St. Louis University has received hundreds of angry e-mails.

Bizarro Earth

Pacific Islanders To Be Early Refugees Of Climate Change

The Carteret Islands are almost invisible on a map of the South Pacific, but the horseshoe scattering of atolls is on the front-line of climate change, as rising sea levels and storm surges eat away at their existence. For 20 years, the 2,000 islanders have fought a losing battle against the ocean, building sea walls and trying to plant mangroves.

Each year, the waves surge in, destroying vegetable gardens, washing away homes and poisoning freshwater supplies. Papua New Guinea's Carteret islanders are destined to become some of the world's first climate change refugees. Their islands are becoming uninhabitable, and may disappear below the waves.

Bizarro Earth

Tiny earthquake shakes St. Louis region

St. Louis - No major damage was reported after a minor earthquake shook the St. Louis region.

The tiny quake, centered 10 miles southeast of St. Louis, struck around 11 p.m. Tuesday in East St. Louis, Ill., said Waverly Person, a geophysicist at the National Earthquake Information Center in Denver.

It had a magnitude of 2.5 and probably doesn't signify a larger quake to come, Person said.

Four people called the center and said they felt the quake, Person said. Such quakes happen about two or three times a year in the area, which sits near the New Madrid Fault.

Cloud Lightning

Thousands lose power as storm hits Maritimes

Thousands of people in Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick were without electricity Wednesday morning as winds of up to 100 km/h swept through through Atlantic Canada.

Nova Scotia Power said electricity was restored to about 100,000 customers overnight, but roughly 25,000 were still without service.

As many as 11,000 P.E.I. residents also lost power, Maritime Electric reported. Another 8,500 homes and businesses were in the dark in southeastern New Brunswick, but only 650 remained without power by late Wednesday morning.

High winds and up to 70 mm of rain knocked out power across mainland Nova Scotia overnight. Winds were still gusting at 77 km/h in parts of Cape Breton Wednesday morning.

Margaret Murphy, a spokesperson for Nova Scotia Power, said the winds were especially severe in the Windsor and Bridgewater areas.

Bizarro Earth

"Borehole" Data Suggext Earth's Warming At Faster Pace

CORVALLIS, Ore. - A temperature analysis of more than 600 boreholes from throughout the Northern Hemisphere suggests that the Earth's climate may be warming at a higher rate than tree-ring analysis and other methods had led scientists to believe.

"If we're right, these boreholes are showing that the Earth is more sensitive to whatever is forcing the climatic change," said Robert N. Harris, an associate professor in the College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences at Oregon State University and a principal investigator in the study.

Results of the research by Harris and colleague David S. Chapman of the University of Utah were just published in the Journal of Geophysical Research. The researchers also will present their data in December at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union.

Borehole temperatures have been measured since the 1920s, but only recently has this temperature analysis been applied to global warming studies. Unlike most "proxy" methods to reconstruct climate models, which depend entirely on statistical analysis, borehole temperature research is based on the physics of heat diffusion.

Bizarro Earth

Not everyone in Summerville noticed Saturday's earthquake

Some people felt or heard the Summerville earthquake Saturday, but other town residents had no idea it occurred. It measured magnitude 2.6 on the Richter scale, said Pradeep Talwani, director of the South Carolina Seismic Network at the University of South Carolina.

The U.S. Geological Survey measured the quake at magnitude 2.4, said Joyce Bagwell, retired director of the Earthquake Education Center at Charleston Southern University.

"That's what we call a preliminary reading. You really need to get all your data in," Bagwell said.

Bagwell, who lives in Summerville, said she didn't feel the quake, but her son and grandchildren did. A quake has to be at least magnitude 2 to be felt, she said.

Bizarro Earth

Southern Japan rocked by strong earthquake

Tokyo - An earthquake measuring 6.0 on the Richter scale shook southern Japan on Tuesday in the latest major tremor to hit the archipelago, but there were no reports of damage, officials said.

Bizarro Earth

Millions face glacier catastrophe

Global warming hits Himalayas

Nawa Jigtar was working in the village of Ghat, in Nepal, when the sound of crashing sent him rushing out of his home. He emerged to see his herd of cattle being swept away by a wall of water.

Jigtar and his fellow villagers were able to scramble to safety. They were lucky: 'If it had come at night, none of us would have survived.'

Ghat was destroyed when a lake, high in the Himalayas, burst its banks. Swollen with glacier meltwaters, its walls of rock and ice had suddenly disintegrated. Several million cubic metres of water crashed down the mountain.

Cloud Lightning

Gamma Weakens After Lashing Honduras

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras - Tropical Storm Gamma weakened into a tropical depression Sunday and drifted off Honduras after torrential downpours lashed the Central American coast, killing 14 people including a young family of four.

Bizarro Earth

Northern Australia rocked by earthquake

Sydney - The northern Australian city of Darwin was rocked by an offshore earthquake on Monday but there were no reports of injuries or damage.