Earth Changes
Police say the family dog, a power breed, attacked the child and her grandmother for no apparent reason yesterday.
The girl suffered severe bite marks on her head and body.
Her grandmother is recovering in hospital.
The police's Frederick Van Wyk says, "The pit bull, a family dog, was taken to Hermanus' animal welfare and put down. The grandmother was transferred to a nearby hospital for medical treatment. We've opened an inquest docket for further investigation."
The fire was reported just after 1 p.m. east of San Andreas after California Highway Patrol officers were investigating a report of a woman driving up Mountain Ranch Road as her car was emitting sparks, officials said.
Officers arrested Renee Hogan for driving under the influence, CHP said.
Investigators said they determined Hogan was driving her 2002 Kia Rio on a right rear rim that was creating sparks. Her vehicle later burned as the flames spread.
A powerful earthquake hit central Italy on Wednesday night, leaving at least 290 people dead with the death toll still rising. A number of small towns and villages were reduced to rubble. Rescue teams dug deep underneath the rubble in the search for possible survivors. Strong tremors were felt in the Italian capital on Wednesday night as well.
As many as 2,500 people have lost their homes to the earthquake, according to the data released by the Italian civil defense authorities. More than 1,800 aftershocks have rocked the region since Wednesday's quake with Saturday night being the first one without any major tremors. Rescue operations are still in progress.
Two quakes larger than 4 in magnitude early Monday rocked the crater of Katla, the country's Met Office said in a statement. That was followed by at least 10 more tremors at the volcano, which rises 1,450 meters (4,757 feet) into the air on the North Atlantic island's southern coast.
There were no immediate reports of casualties or damages to property.
When Knut Nylend, an official from the Norwegian Nature Inspectorate (Statens naturoppsyn - NNI) went out on a routine inspection near Hardangervidda National Park on Friday, he wasn't expecting to see hundreds of dead reindeer lying across a field.
"They were lying there dead in a fairly concentrated area. Reindeer are pack animals and are often close together. During a heavy thunderstorm, they may have gathered even closer together out of fear," NNI spokesman Knut Nylend told Norwegian news outlet NTB, as cited by The Local.
Emergency crews have spent the day pumping out water from homes after a number of incidents were caused by a massive storm which rolled through the middle of England even taking down a supermarket roof.
Flash floods bringing rainfall of up to 50mm hit parts of the country as a ferocious lightning storm crossed the mid section and headed eastwards in the late afternoon.
The village of Kirkton was deluged in water as golf ball sized hail stones slammed down in the streets of Deeping in Lincolnshire.
They also pelted the ground from morning till afternoon in Oxford.
There was no immediate warning of any tsunami triggered by the quake, which was 10km deep, the USGS said.
There were no reports of any damage or casualties.
Source: Reuters
The shocking and rare sight of such a massive anvil cumulo-nimbus cloud, formed when a major thunderstorm becomes so powerful that it begins to reach the highest levels of the atmosphere causing the cloud tops to be blown to the side by wind shear, startled many local residents who feared a nuclear blast or an explosion at one of the coal mines in the Kuzbass region.
Other residents however joked about the fearsome sight of the mushroom cloud with one Instagram user, @Kemerovo_insta, joking that there was "a nuclear war today in Chusovitino."

The storm that caused the deep-Earth tremor was a 'weather bomb' that struck over the North Atlantic. This is a small but potent storm in which pressure quickly builds, creating a more vigorous storm
Using seismic equipment, researchers have managed to trace its location to a distant and powerful storm between Greenland and Iceland.
The findings could help experts learn more about the Earth's inner structure and improve the detection of earthquakes and oceanic storms.
The storm that caused the deep-Earth tremor was a 'weather bomb' that struck over the North Atlantic.
This is a small but potent storm in which pressure quickly builds, creating a more vigorous storm.
As the storm hit, groups of waves pounded the ocean floor between Greenland and Iceland.
The Yalobusha County Coroner's Office identifies the victim as 51-year-old Donna Hendrix of Coffeeville.
Sheriff Lance Humphreys told WTVA-TV that the lighting struck Hendrix near the Bryant boat landing, in the southern part of the county.
Hendrix's boyfriend was taken to a hospital. There's no word on his condition.
An autopsy will be performed on Hendrix to determine an official cause of death.














Comment: See also: Weather bomb: The rare, deep-Earth tremor that shook the planet