Earth Changes
"As the sun rose today, everyone noticed the blue rooftops, blue parking lots...we started panicking a bit", local resident Dmitry told RT via phone. The fallout was spotted in an industrial zone on the outskirts of the city.
According to Dmitry, the strange snow smelt somewhat like iron, but was not giving the locals much trouble and even brightened up the area's gloomy surroundings.

Pedestrians make their way along a snow covered street during a winter snow storm in Cambridge, Massachusetts in this file photo taken on February 9, 2015.
"It'll be zero degrees and blowing snow, and that's not a good time for everybody," said Roger Sample, who owns a construction business in the town on the shores of New Hampshire's Lake Winnipesaukee and serves as the carnival's chairman.
The carnival, which Sample said has been held for more than two decades, typically draws about 1,000 visitors out onto the frozen lake's Alton Bay for games and rides, as well as to see small planes that land on the ice.
The badly decomposed body of a nearly 6-foot-6 female manatee was hoisted from a waterway off 10th Street and Andrews Avenue; another dead manatee was pulled from a canal just west of Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport, said Liz Barraco, a spokeswoman with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission.
The commission first received a call Tuesday night about the dead female manatee but was unable to recover the remains until Wednesday morning.
"She was pretty badly decomposed, so it was clear she had been deceased for some time," Barraco said.
A rescue vessel is rushing to free a damaged Australian fishing ship with 27 people aboard which has become trapped in thick Antarctic ice.
The 207-foot ship, the Antarctic Chieftain, suffered propeller damage after hitting a chunk of ice on February 7 in an isolated region near the Ross Sea, south-east of New Zealand. The ship, which is used for harvesting Patagonian toothfish, became stranded in ice floes up to 10 feet thick and lacked the power to break free.
Les Scott, managing director of Tasmanian-based Australian Longline, which owns the ship, said an underwater video inspection showed three of the four propeller blade tips were damaged. None of the crew has been injured.
While the first of two clipper storms this week will stay weak until swinging east of New England, the second clipper storm rolling in this weekend will strengthen significantly.
People on weekend ski trips or partaking in other travel from the Great Lakes to New England will run the risk of getting stuck in the storm and the frigid air moving in.
According to AccuWeather.com Senior Meteorologist Henry Margusity, "The storm could bring life-threatening conditions, especially in New England with very low temperatures and strong winds combining with snow to bring blizzard conditions."
Initially, light snow will move across the Midwest Friday night into Saturday. However, winds will increase after the snow begins as bitterly cold arctic air arrives and AccuWeather RealFeel® Temperatures plunge below zero F.
The snow and increasing wind will move into the central Appalachians during the day Saturday and will reach the Interstate-95 corridor in the mid-Atlantic and southern New England Saturday afternoon and evening.
As the storm reaches the Atlantic Ocean Saturday night, it will strengthen.
The storm has the potential to bring a moderate to heavy snowfall from the upper part of the mid-Atlantic to southern and central New England Saturday night into Sunday.
The attack happened about midnight Feb. 1 at a home on Hickory Street when a large-breed dog attacked two members of the household before being shot by a responding officer.
The dog was acting aggressively when the officer arrived and "due to the serious nature of the residents' injuries, the officer felt compelled to use his weapon," police said.
The two residents were taken to an area hospital with animal bites. Police did not release their identities but said they remain hospitalized.
No other injuries were reported.
An investigation into what prompted the dog to attack is ongoing.
The Kern County Sheriff's Office said it was told the dog turned on the girls, ages 7 and 8, while they were playing. The attack occurred around 5 p.m. on the 11000 block of Kyte Avenue.
The children were taken to Delano Regional Medical Center and then to the children's hospital in Madera. The sheriff's office said the girls will survive, but the injuries were not specified.
Animal control officers captured the dog, described as a pit bull mixed breed.
And it turns out, this happens a few times each winter on Lowcountry beaches.
Usually, strong off-shore winds push them onto the shore at high tide and they're stuck until the tide comes back in. Over the weekend, wind gusts were coming in stronger than 20 miles an hour.
Monday Night, we spoke with Mel Bell, the fisheries management director for the Department of Natural Resources who said this is pretty normal.
Bell said the last time this happened was in December on Fripp Island.
Last winter brought an unprecedented number of snowy owl sightings in the northern United States, and this winter is turning out to be above average as well.Here's some short film footage taken at Beech Hill Preserve in Rockport, Maine (on 30 January 2015), of one of the many snowy owls seen this winter:
Scientists believe last year's southward sweep of the arctic species was triggered by a record nesting season in northern Quebec. The Cornell Lab of Ornithology says there was another bumper crop last summer in Nunavut in northernmost Canada.
Snowy owls are being reported on the online eBird database this winter across the northern-third of the Lower 48 states from Washington state to Maine.

A sign (in black) that reads "Tap without Water" is seen inside an ice-cream shop at the Pinheiros neighbourhood in Sao Paulo February 10, 2015.
In São Paulo, the country's largest city with a metropolitan area of 20 million people, the main reservoir is at just 6 percent of capacity with the peak of the rainy season now past.
Other cities in Brazil's heavily populated southeast such as Rio de Janeiro face less dire shortages but could also see rationing.
Uncertainty over the drought and its consequences on jobs, public health and overall quality of life have further darkened Brazilians' mood at a time when the economy is struggling and President Dilma Rousseff's popularity is at an all-time low.
After January rains disappointed, and incentives to cut consumption fell short, São Paulo officials warned their next step could be to shut off customers' water supply for as many as five days a week - a measure that would likely last until the next rainy season starts in October, if not longer.
State officials say they have not yet decided whether or when to implement such rationing, in part because they are still hoping for heavy rains in February and March. Indeed, thunderstorms in recent days have caused lakes to rise a bit.
Still, independent projections suggest that São Paulo's main Cantareira reservoir could run out of water as soon as April without drastic cuts to consumption.
As such, the race is on to secure water while it lasts.
Large hospitals in São Paulo are installing in-house water treatment and recycling centers, among other measures, to make sure they can still carry out surgeries and other essential tasks if regular supply stops.
Comment: See also: Brazil's suffers worst drought in history
It's all the more incredible after this happened in December:
Extreme flooding in Sao Paulo, Brazil














Comment: The northeast USA cannot seem to get a break from the record setting cold and snow, which shows no promise of ending soon: