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Fri, 15 Oct 2021
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Fire

Major moorland fire in Yorkshire, UK - In February?

Yorkshire moorland fire
A major moorland fire has broken out above Marsden in West Yorkshire.

Around forty fire fighters are at the moment tackling the blaze next to the Great Western Inn on Manchester Road.

Four appliances from West Yorkshire are there and one from Greater Manchester is tackling the fire from their side.

200 square metres of moorland are ablaze and the fire service say it's likely that they'll be there throughout the night. No cause is yet known.

Comment: Whatever the cause, a wildfire in February in Yorkshire is certainly unusual. It could be related to the record heat much of the UK has seen in recent days: UK: Hottest February day ever as temperatures soar to 20C/68F

It's also notable that the summer drought and heatwave of 2018 brought about an unprecedented number of wildfires to the UK: Wildfire the size of 50 football pitches breaks out in "tinder dry" New Forest, UK



And check out SOTT radio's: Behind the Headlines: Earth changes in an electric universe: Is climate change really man-made?


Cloud Precipitation

1 dead after record rainfall on the island of Crete, Greece

The historic bridge over river Keritis near Chania, Crete collapsed in major floods yesterday, Feb 25

The historic bridge over river Keritis near Chania, Crete collapsed in major floods yesterday, Feb 25
The Greek island of Crete has experienced torrential rainfall and flooding for the second time in 7 days. Some areas of the island have now recorded over 1 metre of rain so far this month.

A weather front, known locally as "Oceanis" brought heavy rain, hail and strong wind to the island from 23 February, 2019.

Greek New Agency ANA-MPA said that authorities in Crete are searching for a man went missing on 24 February after his vehicle was swept away by flood water in Apokoronas municipality. A body has since been recovered.

Local reports say that emergency teams have rescued others from flood water and from vehicles trapped in landslides. Schools and roads have been closed.


Comment: See also these other recent reports of the wild weather in southeast Europe:


Snowflake Cold

Hurricane-strength winds create bizarre 'ice tsunami' in Great Lakes region (VIDEO)

ice tsunami great lakes
© Town of Hamburg Emergency Services
High winds haranguing the eastern seaboard of the US are also launching vast sheets of ice off the Niagara River onto dry land in what has been dubbed an 'ice tsunami,' much to the consternation of local residents.

Wind speeds of up to 75 mph, hurricane strength, have damaged power lines and felled trees in some parts of the Great Lakes region, including both the Canadian and US sides of Niagara Falls.

"Strong winds blowing ice over the retaining wall from the lake," local police warned. "Drive with caution."

Snowflake Cold

Phoenix, Arizona shatters 122-year-old LOW temperature record

Phoenix

Phoenix
Sure there's snow and rain all around Arizona, but it's been darn cold outside, too.

How cold was it Friday?

So cold, that Phoenix smashed a 122-year-old record for the lowest high temperature ever recorded in the city on Feb. 22, according to the National Weather Service in Phoenix.

And it wasn't even close.

The official high temperature on Friday was a frigid (well, for Phoenix) 47 degrees.

Comment: Also pertinent: Flagstaff, Arizona digs out from a 36-inch snowfall that shatters 126 year record - UPDATE


Fish

Millions of fish have been dying in Australia's major rivers

Australian fish are dying in their millions
© Robert McBride
Australian fish are dying in their millions
Fish have been struggling to breathe and dying by the millions on the banks of Australia's largest river system. Experts say that without serious change, it will continue to happen.

Poor management, excess upstream irrigation and drought led to three mass deaths of endangered fish species during December and January in the Murray-Darling Basin. These deaths included Murray cod fish that were decades old, according to an investigation by the Australian Academy of Science that was published last week.

Craig Moritz at the Australian National University in Canberra, who chaired the investigation, says the sight of millions of dead fish should be a wake-up call. He described the mass fish deaths as a mainland equivalent of the coral bleaching events that have been hitting the Great Barrier Reef.

Cloud Lightning

Lightning bolt kills 3 brothers in Pir Mahal, Pakistan

lightning
© Johannes Plenio
Three real brothers were killed when lightning struck them in Pir Mahal, capital city of Pir Mahal tehsil in Punjab province, on Monday, Dunya News reported.

According to details, three sons of Anwar Rehmani, a resident of Lower Colony area of Pir Mahal, were working in the fields when lightning struck them as a result they died on the spot.

The deceased were identified as 20-year-old Nadir, 14-year-old Sajid and 12-year-old Haider.

Attention

Dearth of worms blamed for dramatic decline in UK songbird population

Song thrush numbers were found to have declined by more than 50 per cent between 1970 and 1995
© Getty/iStock
Song thrush numbers were found to have declined by more than 50 per cent between 1970 and 1995
Britain's first farmland worm survey has revealed that nearly half of English fields lack key types of earthworm and may help explain the alarming decline of one of the country's most loved songbirds.

The citizen science project, in which farmers dug for worms in their own fields, has prompted 57 per cent of them to pledge to change their soil management practices - a move that may benefit the song thrush, for whom worms are a vital food source.

The English population of the song thrush, popular for both its voice and its habit of using stones as an "anvil" to smash the shells of its other favourite food - snails - declined by more than 50 per cent between 1970 and 1995, leading to it being listed as a species of conservation concern.

Sun

UK: Hottest February day ever as temperatures soar to 20C/68F

crocuses

Thousands of crocuses have started to bloom weeks early after unusually high temperatures at National Trust's Wallington Hall in Northumberland
Today is the warmest February day on record in the UK with temperatures reaching 20.3C in Ceredigion, on the west coast of Wales, the Met Office has announced.

It is also the first time the country has seen a high over 20C during winter, according to the weather service.

The previous all-time record for February - 19.7C - was logged in Greenwich in 1998.

The balmy weather has been enjoyed across Britain, with places as far north as Carlisle seeing the mercury soar into the high teens today.

Grahame Madge, a Met Office spokesman, told The Independent earlier on Monday that the rising temperatures were putting the UK-wide record within touching distance.

Comment: It would be premature of the global warmists to declare victory because, while Northern Europe may be basking in unseasonably warm temperatures, across the pond record cold is causing chaos: 'Bomb cyclone' strikes eastern US: 550,000 still powerless from fierce winds


As we've seen in the past, these wild swings in the seasons are merely a prelude of what's to come. After all, this time last year the UK was being battered by the "beast from the east":


As we enter what appears to be a period of extreme cooling, we can find clues for what to expect from previous mini ice ages in recorded history. As noted in The Little Ice Age and Europe's Encounter with North America: A Cold Welcome:
And the reason for this is the harshness of the said country, with the cold that lasts for eight months of winter, to the point, as he has stated, that the rivers freeze over, and the people are always shivering by the fire and there is little firewood...
And this witness has heard that after the said winter come four months summer, when the heat is almost worse than the cold winter; and so the saying there is, winter for eight months and hell for four [ocho meses de invierno, cuatro de infierno]
See also: And check out SOTT radio's: Behind the Headlines: Earth changes in an electric universe: Is climate change really man-made?


Windsock

'Bomb cyclone' strikes eastern US: 550,000 still powerless from fierce winds

Lake Erie ice
© Tara Walton/The Canadian Press via AP
A massive build up of ice is seen after being pushed onto the shore of Mather Park, near the Peace Bridge in Fort Erie, Ont., Monday, Feb. 25, 2019. A windstorm Sunday broke an ice boom in Lake Erie and allowed the ice, which was floating on the water at the mouth of the Niagara River, to spill over the retaining wall and onto the shore and the roadway above.
Ferocious winds from a potent "bomb cyclone" roared across the eastern United States, and 550,000 homes and businesses were still without power Monday.

At midday, nearly 80 million people were under high-wind warnings or advisories across parts of 14 states, according to the National Weather Service. At least 1,200 flights were canceled Monday, according to FlightAware.

Wind gusts of up to 81 mph were reported from the storm, toppling trees and power lines. Giant chunks of ice spilled over the banks of the Niagara River across from Buffalo on Sunday, creating bizarre, 30-foot-tall ice mounds. At one point early Monday, 650,000 were without power.

The storm was the same system that earlier had brought snow to Los Angeles and Las Vegas, record snow to Flagstaff, Arizona, a blizzard and bitter cold to the upper Midwest and floods and deadly tornadoes in the South. It is called a bomb cyclone because it rapidly intensified after a dramatic drop in atmospheric pressure.

Over the weekend, a woman was killed when a tornado hit Mississippi, and a man died when he drove into floodwaters in Tennessee, officials said.

Knoxville was among the hardest hit cities in Tennessee when a record-setting amount of rain and devastating floods swamped the state. "There were no areas of Knoxville that weren't affected," Knox County Commissioner Larsen Jay said.


Binoculars

Finland's border patrol tweets phenomenal photo of island mirage at -25C

finland island mirage
© Twitter / Lapin rajavartiosto
A Finnish border guard was, quite literally, stopped in their tracks Sunday after a 'new island' appeared in the middle of the frozen Lake Inari without warning.

Finland's Lapland Border Patrol tweeted images of the strange, apparently geological, phenomenon; an impressive feat considering temperatures in the region had plummeted as low as -25 degrees Celsius and there was no sight nor sound of any volcanic activity in the area that might explain the sudden appearance of new rock formations, seemingly out of nowhere.

It was merely an optical illusion, however, as one commenter pointed out on Twitter. Light behaves differently when passing through atmospheric layers, which can lead to mirage-like effects along the horizon, reflecting and refracting distant landscapes in mind-bending ways.

Comment: According to Wiki it seems mirages in the Arctic may be more common than we think:
In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Fata Morgana mirages may have played a role in a number of unrelated "discoveries" of arctic and antarctic land masses which were later shown not to exist. Icebergs frozen into the pack ice, or the uneven surface of the ice itself, may have contributed to the illusion of distant land features.
The National Snow and Ice Data Center details how these mirages are formed in the Arctic:
Mirages and optical illusions

Mirages and other optical illusions occur in the Arctic because of special atmospheric conditions that bend light. A superior mirage occurs when an image of an object appears above the actual object. Superior mirages sometimes appear in the Arctic because of the weather condition known as a temperature inversion, where cold air lies close to the ground with warmer air above it. Since cold air is denser than warm air, it bends light towards the eyes of someone standing on the ground, changing how a distant object appears.
Although the Finnish coast guard could be forgiven for assuming it was either a mirage or a new island, because nearly every day unusual events are being documented that confirm our planets changing atmosphere, and its geography. But we can't say for sure whether or not this mirage is typical for the region or reflective of these new conditions: