Earth Changes
2013-07-21 05:09:31 UTC
2013-07-21 17:09:31 UTC+12:00 at epicenter
Location
41.713°S 174.443°E depth=14.0km (8.7mi)
Nearby Cities
46km (29mi) ESE of Blenheim, New Zealand
53km (33mi) SSW of Karori, New Zealand
54km (34mi) SSW of Wellington, New Zealand
67km (42mi) SW of Lower Hutt, New Zealand
72km (45mi) SSW of Porirua, New Zealand
'Senator Boxer's own experts contradict Obama on Climate Change' -- warmists asked: 'Can any witnesses say they agree with Obama's statement that warming has accelerated during the past 10 years?' For several seconds, nobody said a word. Sitting just a few rows behind the expert witnesses, I thought I might have heard a few crickets chirping...Climate Depot Round Up of July 18, 2013 Senate Environment & Public Works Committee Global Warming Hearing:
Analysis: 'Senate global warming hearing backfires on Democrats' - 'Skeptics & Roger Pielke Jr. totally dismantled warmism (scientifically, economically, rhetorically) at today's Senate hearing' (via JunkScience.com)
'Sen. Boxer's own experts contradict Obama on climate change' - During yesterday's Environment and Public Works hearings, Sen. David Vitter asked a panel of experts, including experts selected by Boxer,
"Can any witnesses say they agree with Obama's statement that warming has accelerated during the past 10 years?"For several seconds, nobody said a word. Sitting just a few rows behind the expert witnesses, I thought I might have heard a few crickets chirping, but I couldn't tell for sure. We'll give Obama the benefit of the doubt and count the crickets in the "maybe" camp. After several seconds of deafening silence, global warming activist Heidi Cullen, who formerly served as a meteorologist for the Weather Channel, attempted to change the subject. Cullen said our focus should be on longer time periods rather than the 10-year period mentioned by Obama. When pressed, however, she contradicted Obama's central assertion and said warming has slowed, not accelerated. Several minutes later, Sen. Jeff Sessions returned to the topic and sought additional clarity. Sessions recited Obama's quote claiming accelerating global warming during the past 10 years and asked,
"Do any of you support that quote?"Again, a prolonged and deafening silence ensued. Neither Cullen nor any of the other experts on the panel spoke a word, not even in an attempt to change the subject.
Comment: This is the second time in one month that Lethbridge has been hit with a severe weather emergency!

The New World supermarket in Blenheim, on New Zealand's south island, is closed after the earthquake.
Geonet said it was centred in the Cook Strait, 20 kilometres east of Seddon at a depth of 17 kilometres. It struck at 5.09 pm (3.09pm AEST).
It is the latest in a sequence of major earthquakes that have been hitting Wellington and wider areas around central New Zealand since Thursday.
NOAA (the National Oceanic and Atmosphere) describes the cold wave that will reach the Southern Cone of America and Rio Grande do Sul as "extraordinary."
MetSul Meteorology analysis says that the wave will bring polar temperature to atypical locations as far north as northern Bolivia and southern Peru as well as the Midwest of Brazil, Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Minas Gerais.
According to NOAA, the flow of moisture from the sea will bring snow to coastal areas of Patagonia to southern Brazil, including the province of Buenos Aires and also in Uruguay.
The report adds that heavy snow will hit much of Patagonia, reaching Viedma and Bahia Blanca with accumulated 10-15 centimeters. Should snowing, says NOAA, mostly in the province of Buenos Aires. In the area of ​​the River Plate and the southeastern Uruguay can be expected bumps of snow and snow mixed with rain (water nieve).
An information bulletin issued by the Prince George Fire Centre on Friday, July 12 stated the inclement weather had allowed the Wildfire Management Branch of the Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations (FLNRO) to wrap up their response to several of the wildfires in the region, reducing the number of active fires in the Prince George Fire Centre to just four.
Last week saw 16 new, small wildfires in the region, but the Fire Centre noted they didn't pose any risk to structures.
Just one of those fires was the result of human activities.
"We have had 123 fires and burned 2,136 hectares so far this year," said Dustin Eno, a fire information officer with the Prince George Fire Centre.
The majority of that activity has been in the Fort Nelson Zone.
"Last year at this time we had had 137 fires and burned 7,467 hectares," he added.
When sunspot activity is high, as it was during the 1990s and early 2000s, temperatures tend to be high as well. When it is low, as it is now, temperatures fall. And because sunspot activity occurs in decades-long cycles, the unusually cold winter and spring of 2012 may be just the beginning. As a Barron's article recently noted, current sunspot activity is now the least it has been in a century.
What this means is that the era of global cooling has begun. In the northern hemisphere, three out of the four last winters and springs have been unusually cold. This spring was so cold in East Asia that China was forced to import millions of tons of grain and soybeans from the U.S. and other suppliers.
High winds caused by storms that swept through parts of southern Ontario and Quebec are being blamed for the death of 21-year-old woman and the loss of power to hundreds of thousands of people in both provinces.
A 21-year-old woman died after she was struck by a falling tree branch at pool in Boucherville, Que., on Montreal's south shore. Two other people were hurt - a 6-year-old boy and a 40-year-old woman.
By midnight, about 400,000 customers in Quebec were still without power in the wake of severe storms that passed through the province. High winds and falling tree branches are to blame for the outages, Louis Olivier Batty, a spokesperson with Hydro-Québec, said earlier Friday.
A bald eagle was found dead along the St. Louis River on Monday evening, ensnared in fishing line. That was its second unfortunate experience this year.
The bird was one of the two eagles that were found with their talons entangled May 12 when they crashed to the tarmac at the Duluth International Airport.
Mike Schrage, wildlife biologist for the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa, said one of the band's conservation officers found the dead eagle Monday evening just south of the U.S. Highway 2 bridge over the St. Louis River near Brookston.
"Judging from the condition of the carcass, it had been dead for two or three days," Schrage said.
When Schrage received the bird, it was wearing a band on one leg. Schrage called the band number in to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Bird Banding Laboratory at Patuxent, Md. He confirmed the bird was one of the two that had been found at the airport in Duluth on May 12. The bird involved in the fishing-line incident had been treated at the Raptor Center in St. Paul, banded and released June 12 at the Carpenter Nature Center in Hastings, Minn.
"It made a beeline back to where it had come from," Schrage said.
Interviews with farmers and new estimates from analysts have revealed weather damage in China's northern grain belt could have made as much as 20 million metric tons (22.05 million tons) of the wheat crop, or 16 percent, unfit for human consumption. That would be double the volume previously reported as damaged.
Higher imports, which have already been revised upwards on initial damage reports, will further shrink global supplies and support prices, fuelling new worries over global food security.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Thursday raised its forecast for China's imports in 2013/14 to 8.5 million metric tons from 3.2 million metric tons in the previous year, prompting U.S. wheat prices to rally to more than two-week highs.










Comment: While it's good to see the Warmists get their comeuppance, the controlled opposition trying to convince us that everything is just peachy with the climate is itself completely oblivious to the Earth Changes our planet is going through.