Earth Changes
Two new studies deepen the fear that global warming could shut down the circulation of the oceans, much as the movie portrays, dropping vast stretches of Asia into drought and exposing the whole Northern Hemisphere to severe ice and snow.
Unlike gradual climate change, where the planet warms steadily, this change would be sudden and sharp enough to roil civilization—happening in as little as three years and resulting in as much as an 18-degree Fahrenheit drop in average temperatures.
Jud Partin is the lead author of the stronger, more ambitious of the two studies. He's also a geophysicist at the University of Texas, and an unabashedly close viewer of a certain summer blockbuster starring Dennis Quaid as hero-scientist Jack Hall.
"In the movie they defy the laws of physics. They have hurricanes developing over land and tornados in Los Angeles and other impossible stuff," Partin told MSNBC. "But they got the climate science pretty right."
First the wolves made a spectacular return to Denmark after a 200-year absence, and now the European jackal has suddenly popped up in the Jutland countryside.
It has been confirmed that a dead male European jackal - which is usually found in southeast Europe (mostly in Greece and Serbia) - has been found near Karup in Jutland, and nothing suggests that it has been released or has escaped from captivity.
"It's always very exciting and quite rare to see new mammal species in Denmark's nature," said Ella Maria Bisschop-Larsen, the president of the conservation society Danmarks Naturfredningsforening. "Although we have experienced the raccoon dog and the wolf recently."
"We're not too happy about the raccoon dog, but the wolf, which is a native species, needs protecting. Now we must discuss how we will handle it if there are more jackals out there or if more arrive."
The road collapsed under the cab of the lorry, which was carrying Watson water jugs, but thankfully the driver and three passengers were able to climb out onto terra firma, reports Apple Daily.
A worker arrived on the scene to figure out how to tow the truck out of the hole, but unfortunately as he stood peering over the edge of the water-filled sinkhole, it eroded further, causing him to fall in.
The 65-year-old swam to the edge of the hole and was able to tread water until he was rescued by other workers. He was thankfully unharmed.
Neighbors are flocking to one Modesto home after a large chunk of ice fell from the sky and landed on the garage Wednesday morning.
"It sounded so loud so it must have been traveling pretty fast," said Lisa Lawrence. She was sitting outside her home on Briggs Avenue around 11 a.m. when she saw something unusual.
"It looked like a garbage bag flying in the air," she said. "I looked up at it, and it was a big old ball of ice, bigger than a basketball and I watched it go down and it went off like a bomb."
That block of ice landed just a few doors down, slamming straight into a roof on Ackerman Way, eventually ending up on the bumper of a car.

The wildfire outside Los Angeles in July this year that torched vehicles on its way through a major highway
And the numbers are still growing: 65 large fires are currently raging across the country, particularly in California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Montana. That includes three Washington state fires or fire complexes that are larger than 100,000 acres burned.
As of this writing, the United States remains at wildfire preparedness level 5 — the highest level — where it has been since Aug. 13.
There are only six other years that have seen more than 8 million acres burned — 2012, 2011, 2007, 2006, 2005, and 2004 — based on National Interagency Fire Center records that date back to 1960. It is hard not to notice that all of these years came since the year 2000.
Comment: And it's not just the US; the whole world is on fire:

A magnitude 3.7 earthquake registered at 3:17 p.m. ET in the area of Shawville, Que., on Sept. 9, 2015.
An earthquake registering at magnitude 3.7 shook an area in western Quebec on Wednesday afternoon.
Natrual Resources Canada reported the quake about three kilometres south-southwest of Gracefield, Que., which is a popular spot for earthquakes.
The federal agency said the quake, which hit at 3:17 p.m. ET on Wednesday, should not lead to damage due to its small scale.
According to the meteorological department, the earthquake, measuring 5.5 on the Ricther scale, was felt in the federal capital Islamabad, Rawalpindi, Peshawar, Abbottabad, Chitral and other mountainous regions.
According to the United States Geological Survey (USGS), the epicentre of the earthquake was just 36 kilometers north east of Hindu Kush region, Afghanistan at a depth of 93km.
However, there was no immediate reports of any loss of life or property.
The quake took place 135 kilometers from the town of Pijijiapan and 136 km from the town of Mapastepec.
Mexico, one of the world's most seismically active counties, has a long history of earthquakes, according to the USGS. In July 2014, five people died after a 7.1-magnitude quake struck the southern Mexican state of Chiapas and neighboring Guatemala.

Family and friends of the Travis Bartley family look for salvageable items Tuesday morning after a microburst with winds around 110 miles per hour destroyed their home located in the 1700 block of Eden Road.
"We were lucky. We were very, very lucky," Bartley said, recalling how his family's home was destroyed Monday night by what the National Weather Service in Topeka is calling "multiple microbursts."
Travis and his wife, Kim, and sons Easton, 6, and Jake, 3, were at home around 8 p.m. in the 1700 block of Eden Road, southwest of Abilene, enjoying a quiet Labor Day evening.

A resident is rescued by a rescue helicopter at a residential area flooded by the Kinugawa river, caused by typhoon Etau, in Joso, Ibaraki prefecture, Japan, in this photo taken by Kyodo September 10, 2015.
Lashing rain pounded the country for a second day, and the Kinugawa River has burst through a flood barrier, sending a tsunami-like wall of water into Joso, about 50 kilometers northeast of Tokyo, AP reported.












Comment: From earlier this year:
Chunk of ice, megacryometeor, falls from sky mysteriously crashing through Chicago man's ceiling
From a couple of years ago:
Megacryometeor? Giant ice meteor slams to Earth near kids playing in Tennessee
And from 8 years ago:
50-pound Ice Chunks Fall From Sky
Car-destroying chunk may be icy meteor