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Thu, 04 Nov 2021
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Bizarro Earth

Chimps attack people after habitat loss

Great Ape
© Morales/age fotostock/SuperStock
Turning on us.

Habitat loss may be to blame for an apparent spate of violent attacks by chimpanzees on humans in the war-torn eastern region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

According to officials at Virunga National Park, located on the border between the DRC, Uganda and Rwanda, at least one person - a child - has been killed in recent months, in a chimpanzee attack just south of the park in the area around the city of Goma.

A woman attempted to scare the chimp away to protect the child, says Alison Mollon of the Frankfurt Zoological Society (FZS) in Germany, which works in partnership with the park. Unfortunately, the chimp reacted aggressively. "It generally seems that where people react aggressively, the result is aggressive behaviour in return," she says.

Mistrust of chimpanzees has been heightened by local media reports, which suggest that as many as 10 people have been killed and 17 injured by chimps, in acts that were reported as "revenge attacks" for people encroaching on their territory.

Such reports highlight the urgent need to defuse the situation - both by educating locals in behaviours that will minimise the chances of violent confrontations, and by habituating chimps to humans. But efforts are being thwarted by the armed conflict between M23 rebels and the DRC government, which began in April.

"As soon as we can return, we will distribute information flyers in Swahili and French," Mollon says. But putting out clear, useful information becomes more difficult once rumours of violence have spread.

Snowflake Cold

Snow causes havoc across eastern Australia -- Video


The Bureau of Meteorology says snow falls have occurred right along the Great Dividing Range and as far north as Queensland's Granite Belt.

At its height, snowfalls of 15 centimetres and wind damage cut roads and rail access to the upper Blue Mountains for more than six hours.

In the Blue Mountains, 300 cars were stranded by the mountain road closures.

But the SES's Jennifer Finlay says most of the 550 calls for help came from further to the south.

"The Illawarra south coast got hit pretty hard with lots of trees down a bit of roof damage, fortunately nothing too severe," she said.

Endeavour Energy reconnected more than 2,000 properties to power on Friday afternoon, but hundreds of outlying properties between Mount Victoria and Medlow Bath and in the Megalong Valley will not get power back until Saturday.

With temperatures predicted to get down to 3 degrees Celsius overnight, the company has urged people in areas where the power is out to check on neighbours who live alone.

Comment: Note how the meteorologist claims "it's not unprecedented" because there were similar conditions in 2008. Well that's alright then! Nothing to worry about!


Ice Cube

Surprise! Now there's more ice at South Pole than ever (So much for global warming thawing Antarctica!)

Ice around the South Pole has expanded to cover a record area, scientists revealed yesterday - a month after saying that the North Pole had lost an unprecedented amount of its ice. Researchers say - rather confusingly - that both occurrences are down to the 'complex and surprising' effects of global warming. The record Antarctic sea ice cover was revealed in satellite images from the US National Snow and Ice Data Center in Colorado.
Image

September 26, 2012, when ice covered more of the Southern Ocean than at any other time in the satellite record.
At the end of the southern winter in September, ice covered 7.51million square miles of sea - more than at any time since records began in 1979. For the last 30 years the amount of Antarctic sea ice has been increasing by 1 per cent each decade. While the rest of the world has been getting warmer over the last 50 years, large parts of the Eastern Antarctic have been getting cooler. Scientists say a cooler Antarctic fits in with the unpredictable nature of climate change.

Comment: For more on 'global warming', read: Climate Change Swindlers and the Political Agenda


Blackbox

California reports second case of plague in an animal in a week

Image
© Loren36
Plague warning signs have been placed near the Taylor Creek Visitor Center
A chipmunk found at the Lake Tahoe Basin United States Forest Service (USFS) Taylor Creek Visitor Center has tested presumptively positive for the bacterium, Yersinia pestis, the agent of plague, according to an El Dorado County Department of Environmental Health press release Oct. 10.

This is the second reported case of plague in a small animal in California in a week. Last week, the Riverside County Department of Environmental Health reported a positive case in a ground squirrel collected at the Fern Basin campground in the San Jacinto Mountains. The campground is north of Idyllwild.

Interim County Public Health Officer Dr. Bob Hartmann advised that the Taylor Creek Recreation Area might have an elevated plague risk. Fall visitors to area picnic spots and campgrounds and area residents should take precautions to protect themselves from plague, a disease transmitted by infected fleas.

Igloo

Australia storm gives rare snow: First October snow in a century


An unusually cold storm in southern Australia has dished out the first October snow in a century.

Snow whitened the ground along the Mount Lofty and southern Flinders ranges, east and north of Adelaide, South Australia, the Australian ABC News website said.

Images published Thursday on the ABC website showed snow-covered ground at Hallett, in an upland valley north of Adelaide. Posted videos showed falling snow in the hills east of Adelaide.

At low elevations, rain fell late Wednesday to early Thursday at temperatures in the lower to middle 40s, weather data available to AccuWeather.com showed.

Normal low temperature in Adelaide is about 50 degrees, whereas the typical high is in the lower 70s.

Bizarro Earth

USGS: Earthquake Magnitude 6.7 - North of Dobo, Indonesia

Dobo Quake_121012
© USGS
Event Time
2012-10-12 00:31:30 UTC
2012-10-12 09:31:30 UTC+09:00 at epicenter

Location
4.842°S 134.085°E depth=24.7km (15.3mi)

Nearby Cities
103km (64mi) N of Dobo, Indonesia
173km (107mi) ENE of Tual, Indonesia
225km (140mi) SW of Nabire, Indonesia
439km (273mi) S of Manokwari, Indonesia
915km (569mi) NNE of Darwin, Australia

Technical Details

Snowflake

Arizona October Snow? Strong fall storm headed for northern Arizona

Image
A strong fall storm moving into Arizona on Thursday is expected to drop up to three inches of snow in the higher elevations. The National Weather Service said the greatest likelihood of severe storms will be from Thursday evening through Friday morning. Daytime temperatures Friday will be about 15-20 degrees cooler than earlier this week.

Up to three-quarters of an inch of rain is expected in some areas, with the possibility of tornadoes.

Forecasters said snow levels could drop to as low as 7,500 feet on Friday. The Kaibab Plateau, San Francisco Peaks and the White Mountains could see between one inch and three inches of snow.

Stock Up

Food prices expected to rise after UK's second wettest summer on record

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Poor UK harvest combined with steadily rising world price of grain contribute to upward pressure on prices

The second wettest summer on record has blighted UK harvests and will lead to food price rises, farmers and retailers have warned.

Wheat yields in England are down by almost 15% on the five-year average, the National Farmers' Union (NFU) reported, with some areas in the west of England suffering worst from the summer rain.

The world price of grain has already been rising in recent months following a heatwave in Russia and the worst drought in 50 years in the US, which destroyed 45% of corn and 35% of the soya bean crop.

Richard Dodd of the British Retail Consortium said: "There certainly are price pressures in the system, which are coming from poor wheat harvests in this country but also in the other big wheat producing countries.

Bizarro Earth

USGS: Earthquake Magnitude 3.9 - 9km NNW of Beloeil, Canada

Image
© USGS
Event Time:
2012-10-10 00:19:28 UTC-04:00 at epicenter
2012-10-09 21:19:28 UTC-07:00 system time

Location:
45.654°N 73.229°W depth=9.9km (6.1mi)

Nearby Cities:
9km (6mi) NNW of Beloeil, Canada
9km (6mi) NNW of Mont-Saint-Hilaire, Canada
11km (7mi) NE of Sainte-Julie, Canada
14km (9mi) NNE of Saint-Basile-le-Grand, Canada
163km (101mi) NNW of Montpelier, Vermont

Radar

Magnitude 4.5 earthquake shakes Montreal area, no damage reported

Image
© Natural Resources Canada
This Natural Resources Canada map shows the epicentre of the early-morning earthquake.
Serious damage highly unlikely, seismologist says.

A small earthquake was felt in and around the Montreal region early Wednesday morning.

Natural Resources Canada seismologist Allison Bent said it was a magnitude 4.5 quake and was centred southeast of Montreal.

"The epicentre is 21 kilometres west-northwest of Saint Hyacinthe and that's about 37 kilometres from Montreal," Bent said in an interview from Ottawa.

There were no reports of damage although the quake did create jitters that had some people scurrying briefly from their houses.

The temblor lasted just a few seconds, causing buildings to rumble.

Bent said any serious damage was highly unlikely.