Earth ChangesS

Attention

Summer? What Summer? Scotland Battered by 100mph Winds

Scotland wind blown lorry
High winds brought chaos to Scotland's transport network today as falling trees blocked main routes.

Roads, rail, air and ferry services were all affected as winds gusting 100mph were recorded in central Scotland.

Sun

US Drought record: El Paso hits 110 days without rain

Lower Valley farmer Kevin Ivey
© Vanessa Monsisvais / El Paso TimesLower Valley farmer Kevin Ivey pulls on a broken branch of a pecan tree
The sight of lush alfalfa fields, pecan trees and white cotton fields may diminish next year if this year's drought doesn't let up soon.

As of today, soon just stretched out a little further.

The Greater El Paso area today will hit a record-breaking 110 consecutive days without a trace of rain. According to the National Weather Service office in Santa Teresa, the old record was 109 days in 2002.

Alarm Clock

Japan's 11 March mega-quake shifted the ocean floor sideways by more than 20m

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Japan's 11 March mega-quake shifted the ocean floor sideways by more than 20m (65ft), according one instrument placed on the seabed off the nation's coast. This direct measurement exceeds the displacement suggested by some models built only from data gathered on land.

The figure was recorded by the Japan Coast Guard which maintains underwater geodetic equipment along the fault responsible for the giant tremor. An upwards movement of 3m (10ft) was registered by the same instrument. The data underlines once again the colossal nature of the Magnitude 9.0 quake and its associated tsunami.

The scale is almost double that estimated only from the terrestrial data. Results show how important offshore data are to know where and to what extent the rupture occurred on the plate boundary.

Cloud Lightning

Lightning strikes kill 40 in Bangladesh

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Dhaka - Lightning strikes during a heavy rainstorm in Bangladesh killed at least 40 people and injured more than 150, most of them harvesting rice in fields or fishing, police and officials said on Tuesday.

The deaths, the largest number of casualties from lightning in a single day, occurred on Monday. Ten people died in northwestern Chapainawabganj district.

Rainstorms ahead of the monsoon season starting in May or June often bring electric storms that kill residents and damage crops.

Cloud Lightning

US: Nursing Home Lost At Least 11 in Joplin Twister

As death toll in tornado-ripped city hits 117, people brace for possible second punch from new storm system. Searches continue ahead of new storms; 1,500 people unaccounted for

Joplin, Missouri - As rescue crews in this city made their way through the debris of thousands of homes and concrete slabs where large stores once stood, the death toll crept higher and a nursing home operator reported that at least 11 of the fatalities were at its premises.

"What used to be a building was nothing more than a pile of rubble," said Bill Mitchell, who operated Greenbriar on the city's south side. Ten victims were residents and the 11th was a staff member, he added. One person remains unaccounted for.


"One of the little old men from the nursing home was standing in the middle of the street when we came out of the house," neighbor Sandy Conlee told the Joplin Globe in describing the aftermath. "He had blood all over his head. He was in shock."

Bizarro Earth

US: 2011 Tornado Death Toll Is Worst Since 1953

Tornado
© NOAATornadoes have killed hundreds of people so far this year.
2011 has a grim new place in the record books: the deadliest year for tornadoes in more than five decades, with 482 people killed by the storms as of this writing.

It's the highest number of fatalities from tornadoes since 1953, when twisters killed 519 people, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the home agency of the National Weather Service.

As of Tuesday morning, the death toll from the devastating tornado that smashed through Joplin, Mo. on Sunday (May 22) had risen to 117, and could continue to rise as officials sort through the wreckage of the town, home to almost 50,000 people.

Cloud Lightning

Are tornadoes more common because of climate change?

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© Associated PressThe tornado that tore through Joplin, Missouri, leaving scores dead.
As the city of Joplin deals with the devastation from Sunday's tornado, some people might wonder whether these extreme weather events are getting more common because of climate change. The answer is that no one really knows.

A tornado is a rotating column of air that stretches from the bottom of clouds to the Earth's surface. They can occur in a wide range of shapes and sizes, typically manifesting as a funnel of condensation surrounded by a cloud of dust and debris. Wind speeds in an average tornado reach more than 100mph (160km/h) and the system itself is less than 100 metres across, but extreme events can be several miles across, with wind speeds of more than 300mph.

It is difficult to relate any individual weather event to climate change and, unlike with hurricanes, there is little robust research on whether the warming planet is causing any noticeable effects. Grady Dixon, assistant professor of meteorology and climatology at Mississippi State University, told AFP: "If you look at the past 60 years of data, the number of tornadoes is increasing significantly, but it's agreed upon by the tornado community that it's not a real increase. It's having to do with better (weather tracking) technology, more population, the fact that the population is better educated and more aware. So we're seeing them more often."

Comment: Here is another perspective on the 'Global Warming' issue:




Cloud Lightning

US: Joplin survivors recall '15 minutes of hell'

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© Eric Thayer/ ReutersRyan Harper paused while looking for a missing friend after a devastating tornado hit Joplin, Mo. yesterday.
Rod Pace, manager of the medical helicopter service at St. John's Regional Medical Center in Joplin had just finished payroll paperwork Sunday evening when he decided to stay an extra 15 to 20 minutes to let the menacing weather pass.

From the second floor, he watched the storm approach. The swirling rain began to form about a mile away.

Then the glass doors he was holding onto - with a 100-pound magnet to keep them locked - were suddenly pulled open. Pace was sucked outside briefly and then pushed back in like a rag doll, all the while clinging to the handles.

Cloud Lightning

US: Tornado warnings' effectiveness questioned after deadly twister

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© Unknown
Tornadoes are nothing new in places like Joplin, Missouri, nor are efforts to alert people to save their lives before swirling 200 mph winds pop up from seemingly nowhere.

Yet despite warnings, watches and sirens, at least 116 people were killed when the twister roared through the southwestern Missouri city early Sunday evening. While insisting that forecasters' alerts went according to plan, the head of the National Weather Service said Monday that the plan -- and how it is communicated -- was not effective enough.

Fish

U.S.: Thousands of Fish Wash up Dead in Ogeechee River

Thousands of fish wash up on Ogeechee River banks, and now people are being warned not to eat from or fish the popular river in five different counties.


"I just ride down here, and I sit and look. I've been doing that for years anyway. I just look at the rivers. Just something to see for me," Nelson Hales said.

Nelson Hales has a sentimental attachment to the Ogeechee River. He's been fishing on the river since he was a little boy and was baptized in the water.