Earth Changes
More than 95 mm (3.80 inches) of rain inundated Kuwait City's International Airport Wednesday into Thursday.
That is just shy of the 117.8 mm (4.64 inches) that the airport has averaged annually in recent years, according to the Kuwait Meteorological Department. Typically, 18.8 mm (0.74 of an inch) is an average rainfall for all of November.
Runoff from the heavy rain flooded roads and damaged some buildings, according to Aljazeera. Schools and public offices were closed on Wednesday and Thursday. Air traffic was suspended at the international airport.
Southeast Missouri, including Cape Girardeau and the Bootheel region, have received one to two inches of snow from the storm while Jefferson City in mid-Missouri has also received two inches or more. Deitsch says the early winter storm will hover over the region into the midday. " Looks like the precipitation should start to get out of here late this morning to early this afternoon, in the metro probably ending sometime between about noon and 3 p.m."
A low pressure system brought some accumulating snow to parts of the Arklamiss today. This is incredibly rare, as snow is more typical later into winter (January, February).
Totals ranged from a dusting to just over half an inch.
While totals were fairly low and impacts were minimal, this event broke a record for earliest accumulating snowfall in history for the twin cities.
And many of us enjoyed it! The kids still had to go to school, but many residents and four legged friends got to enjoy it as well.
Campi Flegrei may have entered a new magma cycle, according to newly released findings that suggest the feature's "subvolcanic plumbing system" is commencing "a new build-up phase." The researchers warn this could give rise "at some undetermined point in the future," to "a large volume eruption."
A large volcanic area west of Naples which has 24 volcanic craters, Campi Fieri, has "produced two cataclysmic caldera-forming eruptions and numerous smaller eruptive events over the past 60,000 years," according to the new paper. Calderas are vacant spaces left after rock explosions during eruptions.
Comment: Considering seismic and volcanic activity around the world is on the rise, the 'near future' may come sooner than the researchers think:
- USGS seismic data points to 2,000% increase in major earthquakes since 1900
- Volcanoes are erupting all over the place right now. Scientists have figured out why: A minute slowdown in the planet's rotation
- 26,290 earthquakes recorded for Turkey in first 7 months of 2017; most seismic activity for 15 years
- Growing, deforming, shaking: Iceland's largest volcano Öræfajökull showing clear signs of unrest for last 18 months
- Scientists observe ice thickening above 'inactive' volcano in Antarctica
- Worldwide volcanic activity uptick update, and new volcano discovered on Jupiter's moon Io
And SOTTs monthly documentary: SOTT Earth Changes Summary - October 2018: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs

Search and rescue workers search for human remains at a trailer park burned by the Camp fire in Paradise.
Fifty-six people have died in the Camp fire, authorities said on Wednesday after they tracked down an additional eight sets of remains outside and in the rubble of homes in Paradise.
The majority of victims, 47 in total, have been tentatively identified by authorities, the Butte county sheriff, Kory Honea, said, but they are awaiting DNA confirmation. Some remains may never be recovered due to the extent of the fire.
Two people have also died in the Woolsey fire, a major blaze around Los Angeles, and authorities said earlier on Wednesday that they were investigating a third apparent fire-related death in the burn zone in the south of the state.
Comment:
- Deaths in California wildfires at 25 - More "devil winds" on the way - Choking air quality - 250,000 evacuated
- California wildfires: At least 42 dead, 200 missing, 250k evacuated, over 7000 buildings destroyed - Camp Fire becomes deadliest in state's history
- California's wildfires are man-made, but not in the way they tell us
Then, a few minutes later, he heard a louder boom, and a pan on the stove rattled.
Vitale, who moved into his Carroll Township home about six years ago, wondered what it was. Then a neighbor called him: "Did you hear that?" Vitale said that he did.
"That's an earthquake," the neighbor told him.
It's been 10 years since an earthquake swarm rattled the Dillsburg area of northern York County. It started with a 2.0 tremor on Oct. 5, 2008, and the booming and rattling occurred periodically until early 2010. The tremors were centered in an area along Old York Road and Brandon Lane in Carroll Township.
A new study recently published in the journal Nature suggested that "ocean warming is at the high end of previous estimates," based on atmospheric data taken between 1991 and 2016. Ocean temperatures are 60-percent higher per year than the estimates offered by the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in 2014, the authors claim.
The research was co-authored by an expert - a Princeton geoscientist no less - so the disturbing newsspread like... well, wildfire across the newsmedia, with each headline more breathless than the last. The only problem was, the numbers used to generate the conclusions in the research were off; way off.
Just after 7 p.m., Michigan State Police Troopers were sent to a home in Big Prairie Township and found a 77-year-old woman unresponsive.
First responders attempted to save the woman but Sharon Daniels was pronounced dead at the scene, according to troopers.
The adverse weather event struck on Monday between the Metropolitan and Biobio regions, with the most severe impacts being reported in the foothill areas of the mountains.
While there was also heavy rainfall, most of the damage to fruit production was caused by unusually large hailstones, which appear to have had the biggest impact in the central O'Higgins region.
The storm comes at a key time as harvesting ramps up for many fruits including cherries, blueberries and stonefruit. However, evaluations on the full impact on the country's fruit production are not expected to become clear for some time.
The press service of the regional branch of the Russian Emergencies Ministry said that no injuries or damages have been reported
An earthquake of 6.5 magnitude was registered off the Kamchatka Peninsula on Thursday. Tremors were felt in four settlements in the Russian Far Eastern Kamchatka Region. The strongest tremors of 6 magnitude were felt in the settlement of Ust-Kamchatsk with a population of around 4,000 people, a representative of the local branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences' Geophysical Service told TASS.
"The earthquake struck at 9:21am local time [0:21am Moscow time]. Its magnitude stood at 6.5. Residents of Ust-Kamchatsk felt it the most with 6 magnitude. Residents of Kozyrevsk and Klyuchi felt tremors of 3 magnitude. In Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, tremors of 2 magnitude were registered," the spokesman said.
The earthquake's epicenter lay to the south of Ust-Kamchatsk, in 78 and 36 kilometers from the coastline.
The press service of the regional branch of the Russian Emergencies Ministry said that no injuries or damages have been reported.














Comment: Details of the 2 earlier flooding episodes: National Guard called in to help as rains wreak havoc across Kuwait
Streets of Kuwait city heavily flooded