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Fri, 05 Nov 2021
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Rare landspout spotted over Tibet for first time in more than 50 years

Tibet landspout
© New China TV


The strange phenomenon has not been seen in the area since 1961 and was a shocking sight for youngsters seeing it for the first time


Tibetan villagers stood staring at the sky as a gigantic landspout passed overhead for the first time in more than 50 years.

The weather phenomenon rarely happen at high altitudes making the sight even more unusual.

Youngsters were filmed watching the skies above Dangxiong County in south-west China in awe and disbelief - with many pointing or holding their wide-open mouths.

The strange phenomenon has not been seen in the area since 1961 and was a shocking sight for youngsters seeing it for the first time in Tibet - also known as 'the roof of the world'.

The landspout, which looks like a tornado but has nothing to do with a storm or bad weather, lasted more than 10 minutes.


Cloud Precipitation

Swathes of south China flooded; 33 dead,15 missing and hundreds of thousands evacuated

Rescuers row as they transfer residents with a boat at a flooded area in Guilin, Guangxi province, China on July 2.
© Reuters
Rescuers row as they transfer residents with a boat at a flooded area in Guilin, Guangxi province, China on July 2.
Torrential rain lashed parts of central and south China on Monday, with floods damaging crops, forcing hundreds of thousands from their homes and killing at least 33, while the north wilted in a heat wave and drought-like conditions.

Water levels in more than 60 rivers in southern China have risen above warning levels, the flood control authority said.

Thirty-three people are confirmed dead and 15 missing as of Monday morning after heavy rain and flooding engulfed provinces central and southern provinces including Hunan, Hubei, Anhui, Sichuan and Guizhou, China's civil affairs ministry said.

The annual rainy season, which arrived in the second half of June, has hit southern Hunan province the most. Weather forecasters predict the relentless downpours could start to ease in coming days.


Arrow Down

Tradesman's ute falls into sinkhole in Perth, Western Australia

Jim Kennington, 50, was passing a roundabout in Perth's Wanneroo on Friday when disaster struck

Jim Kennington, 50, was passing a roundabout in Perth's Wanneroo on Friday when disaster struck
A tradie refused to let the sinkhole that swallowed his ute after a burst water main dampen his spirits.

Jim Kennington, 50, found himself in a hole lot of trouble when he came to a roundabout in Perth's Wanneroo on Friday and felt his tyres sinking.

But he managed to see the lighter side of things when his mate's began to take him to task for his misfortune, reports The West.

'Everybody's had a little laugh at me today,' Mr Kennington said.

'I tried to reverse out but it weren't going anywhere...So I climbed out the passenger side.'

The Water Corporation said an underground water main burst softened the road, causing the sinkhole.

Sun

Heatwave across Bulgaria kills 5 with many more taken to hospital as temperatures hit 44 degrees Celsius (111.2 degrees Fahrenheit)

fountain fun
© ibtimes.co.uk
Five people died on Saturday as soaring temperatures hit the Bulgarian capital Sofia where the mercury was expected to reach as high as 44 degrees Celsius (111.2 degrees Fahrenheit), hospital sources said.

By midday (0900 GMT), the city's emergency services had provided assistance to around 200 people who felt unwell, emergency services spokeswoman Katia Sungarska said.

She advised residents not to leave the house during the day and not to call the emergency services except in cases of urgency in order to allow ambulances to reach those in serious need.

Sofia has for years suffered from a chronic shortage of ambulances, with a fleet of just 25 vehicles serving a city of around two million people.

The red alert for extreme heat was activated on Saturday in 17 regions across the country for the first time this summer.

Question

Massive power outage plunges millions of people across Central America into darkness from Panama to Costa Rica to El Salvador

map Central America
A huge power outage plunged millions of people across Central America into darkness Saturday, as authorities from Panama to Costa Rica to El Salvador scrambled to restore electrical service.

The blackout affected some five million people in Costa Rica alone, where officials largely had managed to restore service after a nationwide power outage lasting about five hours.

Authorities pinned blame for the power outages on a downed Panamanian transmission line that adversely affected the power supply for much of the region.

Countries in the region, from Guatemala to Panama, are connected by the same power grid, covering an expanse of some 1,800 kilometers (1,100 miles).

But that interconnectedness means that the countries of Central America are vulnerable when there are power grid malfunctions in any one.

Attention

Decomposed fin whale washes up in Southampton, New York

The whale had evidence of shark bites, the Atlantic Marine Conservation Society says
© Atlantic Marine Conservation Society
The whale had evidence of shark bites, the Atlantic Marine Conservation Society says
A deceased whale was found floating in the water near Gibson Lane in Southampton Friday night, experts said.

According to the Atlantic Marine Conservation Society, a call came in at approximately 7:30 p.m.

The whale beached around 7:30 a.m. Saturday morning, AMCS representatives said.

The whale is a female fin whale, between 40 to 50 feet in length; fin whales are commonly seen around and near New York waters, experts said.

The whale had evidence of shark bites, but no other signs of injury had immediately been found. In addition, the whale was fairly decomposed, and had initially been sighted floating approximately 9 miles off Shinnecock Inlet on Tuesday, AMCS representatives said.

Attention

Dead fin whale seen east of Prince Edward Island, Canada

fin whale

Fin whale
Another dead whale has been sighted by a recent aerial patrol carried out by Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO).

The carcass of a fin whale has been located east of P.E.I.

"The cause of death is unknown at this time and the Department is determining next steps," said DFO in a news statement.

Recently, the DFO has confirmed the deaths of six North Atlantic Right whales.

Arrow Down

Two dead, one missing as landslides hit Kaski, Nepal after torrential rainfall

The kitchen area of the house owned by Hari Paudel, that was swept away by the landslide along with his wife Shova Paudel, beside Seti River, in Lamachaur, of Pokhara Lekhnath Metropolitan City-19, on Sunday, July 02, 2017.
© Rishi Ram Baral
The kitchen area of the house owned by Hari Paudel, that was swept away by the landslide along with his wife Shova Paudel, beside Seti River, in Lamachaur, of Pokhara Lekhnath Metropolitan City-19, on Sunday, July 02, 2017.
As many as two persons died and another went missing from various locations of Kaski district, following flood and landslide triggered by continuous rainfall since Saturday night.

The deceased have been identified as Shova Paudel (33), wife of Hari Paudel, a permanent resident of Lamachaur in Pokhara Lekhnath Metropolitan City-19 and Tanka Chhetri (14) of Galyang Municipality in Syangja.

Paudel was swept away by the landslide on Sunday Morning at around 4:00 am in Lamachaur. She was attempting to clean the excess water in her kitchen area, when the landslide swept the kitchen along with her, said police.

The house was on a cliff beside Seti River. Her 12-year-old son, however, was safe in the mishap as he was sleeping in another room, said police.

A police team mobilised in the area had recovered Paudel's body some 100 metres down the cliff buried in the debris at around 7:00 this morning.

Cloud Lightning

Lightning bolt kills 2 in Rautahat, Nepal

lightning
Two persons died on the spot after getting struck by a thunder bolt in Dharampur of Gadhimai Rural Municipality-6 in Rautahat district on Sunday.

The deceased have been identified as Bishwanath Rai Yadav (45) and Saroj Yadav (17), both the local residents.

The lightning struck the duo while they were herding the buffaloes in a field yesterday, said police.

Further investigation into the case is underway, said police.

Arrow Down

Massive sinkhole opens up in Janesville, Wisconsin

City of Janesville Department of Public works officials and crews discuss a sinkhole that opened up on North Washington Street in Janesville on Friday afternoon.
© Anthony Wahl
City of Janesville Department of Public works officials and crews discuss a sinkhole that opened up on North Washington Street in Janesville on Friday afternoon.
City crews worked Friday afternoon to fill a massive sinkhole that broke open on a street on the city's west side after heavy rains earlier this week had washed out the ground beneath the roadway.

Crews at the scene Friday afternoon said it took three truckloads of gravel to temporarily fill a sinkhole the length and width of a large car that broke open at about 3 p.m. Friday, leaving a 15-foot deep chasm on the east side of North Washington Street just north of Highland Avenue and the Mercy Hospital and Trauma Center campus.

Troy Egger, a city of Janesville public works department crew leader, told The Gazette that one of his crew members has worked for the city for 31 years.

He said that worker said he has never seen a sinkhole the size of the one that broke open Friday.