Earth Changes
Officials in the city of Caceres in Mato Grosso state say this is the first time they have had a problem with piranhas at the Daveron beach on the Paraguay river, where the aggressive fish began schooling about two weeks ago.
"People have got to be very careful. If they're bitten, they've got to get out of the water rapidly and not allow the blood to spread," firefighter Raul Castro de Oliveira told Globo TV's G1 website yesterday.
Elson de Campos Pinto, 22, was bitten on Sunday.
"I took a dip in the river and when I stood up, I felt pain in my foot," Pinto told G1.
"I saw that I had lost the tip of my toe. I took off running out of the river, afraid that I would be further attacked because of the blood. I'm not going back in for a long time."
City officials said the beach will remain open because it's an important draw for tourists in Brazil's Pantanal region, known for its ecotourism.
Thursday, November 17, 2011 at 13:31:11 UTC
Thursday, November 17, 2011 at 07:31:11 AM at epicenter
Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones
Location:
14.729°N, 91.858°W
Depth:
96.6 km (60.0 miles)
Region:
GUATEMALA
Distances:
38 km (23 miles) WSW of Quetzaltenango, Guatemala
47 km (29 miles) ESE of Tapachula, Chiapas, Mexico
144 km (89 miles) W of GUATEMALA, Guatemala
935 km (580 miles) ESE of MEXICO CITY, D.F., Mexico
"Whether from the public sector or the private sector, the government of Bangladesh is fully behind any attempts to seek out unused land beyond its borders," Minister of Food and Disaster Management Muhammad Abdur Razzaque told IRIN, the news service of the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
So far Bangladeshi officials are involved in preliminary discussions with Ukraine for wheat production and are considering Cambodia for rice, as well as ventures with sub-Saharan Africa, Razzaque said.
The dominant food crop of Bangladesh is rice, accounting for about 94.55 percent of the total cereal crop production.
With little arable land and frequent natural disasters, Bangladesh has often struggled to feed its population, now totaling about 160 million. It has the highest population density in the world but also one of the lowest rates of arable land per resident in the world, totaling about 54 hectares per 1,000 people in 2008, World Bank figures show.
"I smell gas down here on West 21st Street and I don't know where it's coming from, but it's pretty strong down here," said one 911 caller.
"I got a strong odor of gas in my apartment, it just woke me out of my sleep," said another.
Lorain firefighters responded to calls from all over the city between 5 a.m. 9 a.m. Tuesday. The complaints are all the same.
"It's a real, real strong propane smell," said another 911 caller.
"It just smelled like gas, it was a really bad smell, and everything, and I smelled it all the way from my house, all the way up to the high school and everything," said Lorain resident Samantha Haupt.
The earthquake, with a preliminary magnitude of 6.2, struck at 8:42 a.m. local time Wednesday (11:42 p.m. GMT Tuesday), said Indonesia's Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics Agency.
The agency said the quake was centered about 34 kilometers (21 miles) southwest of the mountainous town of Oksibil at a depth of 57 kilometers (35 miles).
It shocked residents in Oksibil, which is located south of Papua's provincial capital, Jayapura.

Half of the pod of pilots whales stranded at Golden Bay have died, according to DoC.
Half of a pod of sixty-five pilot whales stranded on Farewell Spit in Golden Bay have died.
The surviving 34 are stuck in shallow water, between two and three kilometres offshore.
Department of Conservation (DOC) Golden Bay area manager John Mason said there was nothing that could be done for them, other than to hope they manage to swim away on the next high tide.
"They're in a very remote location and they're in a very dangerous location to try and rescue them because to rescue a whale you have to stay with it until it can swim and to do that the water level is usually between your waste and your chest.
Once you've let the whale go you then have to head back to the beach yourself, which in this case would be two to three kilometres away, so we don't rescue them in those situations.
"All we can do is monitor them. I'm not optimistic that they're going to get back to sea but we certainly wish them well and hope that they make it.''

Southern resident killer whales, which live off the coast of Washington State and British Columbia, are one of the most critically endangered groups of marine mammals in American waters.
Both killer whales and Chinook salmon are endangered in the Pacific Northwest. And one of the biggest problems facing both animals is that one eats the other.
According to a new study, a single small and vulnerable group of whales may eat close to a quarter of the salmon run in British Columbia's Fraser River -- and that's just in the summertime.
The findings emphasize the importance, when trying to save one creature, of looking out for everything that hunts and is hunted by it. In this case, whales can't rebound unless the fish bounces back, also. But saving both of them is not that simple.
"This is a case where one endangered species is eating another endangered species," said Rob Williams, a marine conservation biologist now at the University of St. Andrews in the United Kingdom. "We're not going to get anywhere if we have single-species management that doesn't recognize that what is good for one species may be bad for another."
Southern resident killer whales, which live off the coast of Washington State and British Columbia, are one of the most critically endangered groups of marine mammals living in American waters. At last count, the population consisted of just 87 whales.
Seismic waves are waves of energy that travel through the earth, and are a result of an earthquake, explosion, or a volcano that imparts low-frequency acoustic energy. Many other natural and anthropogenic sources create low amplitude waves commonly referred to as ambient vibrations. Seismic waves are studied by seismologists and geophysicists. Seismic wave fields are measured by a seismograph, geophone, hydrophone (in water), or accelerometer.
The propagation velocity of the waves depends on density and elasticity of the medium. Velocity tends to increase with depth, and ranges from approximately 2 to 8 km/s in the Earth's crust up to 13 km/s in the deep mantle.











