Earth Changes
Avalanches caused by a heavy winter snow have killed at least 124 people in north-eastern Afghanistan, an emergency official said on Wednesday, as rescuers clawed through debris with their hands to save those buried beneath.
The avalanches buried homes across four north-east provinces, killing those beneath, said Mohammad Aslam Syas, the deputy director of the Afghanistan natural disaster management authority. The province worst hit appeared to be Panjshir province, about 100km (60 miles) north-east of the capital, Kabul, where the avalanches destroyed or damaged around 100 homes, Syas said.
The acting governor of Panjshir, Abdul Rahman Kabiri, said rescuers used their bare hands and shovels in an effort to reach survivors. Rescue teams had been dispatched to the affected areas and casualties were expected to rise, Syas said.
The heavy snowstorms, which began early Tuesday, hampered rescue efforts. Snowfall from the storm was nearly one meter (3ft) deep in places and fallen trees blocked roads in the Panjshir Valley.
General Abdul Aziz Ghirat, the provincial police chief of Panjshir, said the death toll from the avalanches was expected to rise when rescue attempts resumed at sunrise Thursday.
The quake, with its epicenter around 290km (175 miles) southeast of Hachijo-jima, Izu Islands, struck at a depth of 65km (38 miles).
LATEST: 5.7 earthquake 294 km SE of Hachijo-jima, southern #Japan. No tsunami warning issued http://t.co/q0T3f4PwCf pic.twitter.com/3xbkJRxN3l
— RT (@RT_com) February 25, 2015The event comes just hours after another 4.4 quake took place just off the Kuril Islands, disputed with Russia.
The tremors also come a day after another quake struck off the eastern coast, measuring 5.8, with the epicenter about 100km east of the city of Miyako.
Matt Meehan, who lives in the city, told CBS Miami - which first reported on the shaking - 'These windows started ratting like this. And I'm looking around, and I have a little cat [that] went running in the other direction.'
'My first thought was earthquake,' he told the television station.
Another resident, Boo Zamek, told the CBS affiliate it was a 'very low, um, very subtle vibration' and called it 'strange, curious.'
A spokeswoman for the Coral Gables police department, Kelly Denham, told Daily Mail Online that police received two reports in the past four weeks regarding the 'loud explosion-type noises,' as well as a third report shortly before 11am Tuesday.
Officers have checked out the sounds each time, Denham said, but they have so far been unable to locate their source.
'We have no idea what those noises are,' Denham said.
From New York to Newfoundland, coastal waters rose by as much as 128 millimeters - more than five inches - over the two-year span, states the report, which will be published in an upcoming issue of Nature Communications.
"The extreme sea level rise event during 2009-10 along the northeast coast of North America is unprecedented during the past century," Professor Jianjun Yin of the University of Arizona told BBC News.
"Statistical analysis indicates that it is a 1-in-850 year event."
The extreme rise caused flooding all along the northeast coast, and as far south as Cape Hatteras off the coast of North Carolina, Phys.org reported.
Comment: Coastal communities appear to be very unsafe areas to reside at this time. It would be safer for most individuals to move inland to avoid the threat of flooding that coastlines are experiencing.
Over 70 mm of rain fell in 24 hours between 20 and 21 February in Savana de la Mar, a town in the Hato Mayor province of the Dominican Republic. Puerto Plata in the northern province Puerto Plata, saw 53.7 mm during the same period. The following day the Las Americas airport area close to Santo Domnigo saw 58.9mm of rain.
The worst affected districts are Puerto Plata, Espaillat and María Trinidad Sánchez, which as of yesterday were under red flood alert, while Santiago, Duarte, Sanchez Ramirez and Hermanas Mirabal were on yellow flood alert.
The heavy rain caused rivers to overflow. Damage has been reported to crops and roads, as well as one bridge.
Take a deep breath. Thanks to the massive use of herbicides across the planet, you likely just inhaled a dose of Monsanto's best-selling herbicide, Round Up - at least according to the latest US Geological Survey published in the journal Enviromental Toxicology and Chemistry.
The chemical ingredient used in Round Up, known as glyphosate, as well as other 'inert' toxic chemicals, were found in over 75% of the air and rain samples tested from Mississippi in 2007 - a large river that cuts through the middle of the US, and is the basin in which hundreds of farms' runoff drains.
An evaluation of numerous pesticides currently used were measured through water and air samples collected from 1995 to 2007 during growing season along the Mississippi Delta agricultural region. If 75% of samples containing Round Up isn't shocking enough, there's more:
Comment: Monsanto seems hellbent on targeting all that is natural and normal. In their hubris they fail to notice that, in the end, mother earth always bounces back.
- Monsanto Vs. Nature: The Weeds Fight Back
- Monsanto's Roundup Spawns Superweeds Consuming Over 120 Million Hectares
- Meet the weeds that Monsanto can't beat
According to reports, Ashok, along with his two friends, were attacked by the dogs that also bit the other two when they tried to save him.
Shockingly, the boy is the fifth in just the last month or so to lose his life in vicious attacks by stray dogs in the region. Explaining the reason behind the rising attacks by strays on children, Dr Abhijit Pawde, co-ordinator at the referral veterinary polyclinic, Indian Veterinary Research Institute (IVRI), said: "Dogs are hungrier in winter compared to the other seasons. They have started attacking children as they probably are not able to feed on their regular meal."
Comment: The other earlier reports: Eight-year-old boy attacked by pack of dogs in Baheri, India
Feral dogs kill 5-yr-old in Bareilly, India: Third fatality in a month of 10 attacks
It's a Cane Corso, a large breed not known to show aggression.
But authorities say the dog, and another like it, are responsible for putting a 3-year-old and her grandmother, their owner, in the hospital last week.
Shelter Director Chip Fitz said the child was on a swing outside of her grandmother's home near Amite, with her grandmother watching in the yard, when the animals suddenly attacked.
WA's Department of Parks and Wildlife said it was only the third sighting of the eurasian hoopoe bird in the country and it was "excited" to find it on its cameras.
The sighting of the flamboyant hoopoe, usually native to Eurasia and northwest Africa, is thought to be a result of the birds flying off course during their migration.
The cameras, installed on Adolphus Island to monitor cane toad populations, have also revealed the largest range of wildlife in the area.
The 35 cameras have recorded large numbers of native bird species and endangered Northern Quolls.
Source: Australian Associated Press
"A teacher and six students died on the spot and 11 students were injured after being struck by a lightning bolt in their classroom following heavy rains," Tanzania president's office said in a statement.
"The accident occurred on the weekend of Feb. 22 when the teacher and the students were in their classroom."
Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete said in a statement he was "shocked and saddened" by the incident, which occurred in Kigoma region, and called for calm from teachers and students.
The schoolchildren killed by the lightning strike were aged between 11 and 14 years old, police officials said. (Reporting by Fumbuka Ng'wanakilala; Editing by Drazen Jorgic and Catherine Evans)
Source: Reuters
















Comment: Considering there have been several recent reports of fireballs, it may have been something from above.