Earth Changes
"If you get the chance to see a bloom in Death Valley, especially a super bloom, you should take the opportunity to see it because it could be a once in a lifetime opportunity." - Park Ranger Alan Van Valkenburg
Join Alan in this episode of "Death Valley Exposed" and learn more about the current bloom that is spreading across the park.
Death Valley Exposed is a video podcast series that highlights various snapshots from Death Valley National Park. Produced by Bristlecone Media and the National Park Service in association with Death Valley Natural History Association, an official nonprofit partner of Death Valley National Park.
The Post Courier newspaper has reported deaths in Chimbu and the Western Highlands.
It reported 200 homes have been destroyed, and bridges have been swept away in Oro and West New Britain provinces.
World Vision PNG response manager Bonie Belonio said disaster authorities and humanitarian organisations were scrambling to assess the extent of the damage so distribution of relief supplies could begin.
He said he believed the rains may have taken many people by surprise after the long drought.
Earthquakes 6.0 to 6.9 can cause a lot of damage in very populated areas. News of this earthquake comes just days after a 6.4 magnitude earthquake killed at least 11 people in Taiwan.
The epicentre of the quake is said to have been just 258 miles away from mainland New Zealand.
The earthquake follows a 5.7 magnitude quake hit Christchurch yesterday, causing cliffs to collapse.
The U.S. Geological Survey says the quake struck shortly before 1930 GMT on Monday and was centered 136 miles northwest of Auckland Island. It was at a depth of 6.2 miles.
There was no immediate tsunami alert from the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center.
Minutes later, reports emerged that another earthquake hit Zacharo Town along Greece's west coast.

Russian Emergencies Ministry members work at the site of a residential five-storey apartment building after a gas explosion in the early morning, in the city of Yaroslavl, northeast of Moscow, Russia, February 16, 2016
"Gas exploded in a five story residential building, the structure caved in from the first to the fifth floor," an emergencies ministry representative told RIA Novosti.
"People remain under rubble," the ministry confirmed, adding that at least ten flats have collapsed.
Rescue workers have taken seven bodies from the rubble. Kristina Guzovskaya of the Investigation Committee for the Yaroslavl region, has told Interfax that among the victims there are four women, one man and two children, possibly an 11- and 6-year-old.

MYSTERY: A creature apparently photographed near the Swansea boat ramp has sent ripples through social media.
A creature apparently photographed at Swansea has confused and slightly frightened locals since it washed up on social media on Monday.
Ethan Tippa, who posted the photo on Facebook, typified the general response.
"What the f--- is it?"
The answer, said marine biologist Julian Pepperell, is that it's a pike eel.
The angle of the photo made it difficult to judge the creature's length, but it seems longer than the species' average maximum of 1.8 metres.
"I think it's definitely a pike eel. The head is very indicative of that species," Dr Pepperell said.
"It's hard from the photo to get an idea of the scale."
The nocturnal pike eel is common in NSW waters, but surprisingly little is known about it.
Dr Pepperell said the species is frequently caught by fishers at night who get "the fight of their lives" when they reel in a powerful, thrashing predator with a nasty bite.

Frost on a window forms a heart-shaped pattern on Friday, Feb. 12, 2016, in Falmouth, Maine, where the early morning temperature dipped below zero. Temperatures dropped to even lower levels during the Valentine's Day weekend in the Northeast.
The polar vortex is a storm that is typically centered near the North Pole and tends to keep the coldest air trapped in northern Canada. Occasionally, this storm weakens or shifts enough to allow frigid air to plummet southward into the United States.
The frigid weather follows one of the warmest starts to a winter on record.
Dozens of locations in the Northeast shattered record lows for the date on Sunday morning.
Many locations dipped to their lowest levels of the winter, while some locations plunged to lower levels than all of last winter.
Authorities believed that dead marine mammal posed a risk to the public.
Decomposing whales could attract sharks, and they also create an awful stench.
Samples will now be taken for research purposes, and the carcass buried in a landfill site.
Gregg Oelofse from the City of Cape Town said before the removal, "It's going to be difficult. But the particular location of this animal means we're going to have to take it off by towing it back out to sea."
"We're quite lucky because it's a small whale, a calf, about 6 metres in length so it makes it easier for us."
Hornsea Coastguard was called out to the beach in East Yorkshire at about 3pm on Friday afternoon after reports of a whale or porpoise on the beach.
It was later identified as a white beaked dolphin, and details were passed to the Natural History Museum to arrange collection.
A spokesman for Hornsea Coastguard said: "Team paged by CGOC Humber to a report of a whale/porpoise on the beach north of Hornsea.

Delhi's bird watchers have noticed significant changes in the behaviour of migratory birds this season
Some species of migratory ducks, which used to arrive in their thousands, have trickled down to hundreds.
Experts said the arrival of these birds was also delayed, and this is being attributed to the lack of snow in their homelands in Europe and central Asia.
Some of the migratory birds that did arrive this season, apparently, are ready to leave.
Adding to all the 'confusion', a few birds that breed only in summer are nesting and pairing up in January, a phenomenon usually witnessed in April, say experts.
However, it may be too soon to press the climate change alarm, some birders caution, adding that any change in migratory behaviour could have resulted from the disturbed habitats in the city.
Since midnight Monday, the lake has gone up 1.92 inches, the equivalent of 6.39 billion gallons of water, according to the National Weather Service. The water comes as a winter storm slams the Sierra, bringing several feet of snow to higher elevations and rain at lake level, which sits at roughly 6,223 feet.
The lake—the second deepest in the United States behind Oregon's Crater Lake—was hit hard this year by the drought. Over the summer, the lake was shockingly low. Many boaters were unable to get their crafts into the lake after waters pulled back from most boat launches.











Comment: See also: Greening of the desert: Australia's largest lake comes back to life following heavy rainfall