Welcome to Sott.net
Mon, 25 Oct 2021
The World for People who Think

Earth Changes
Map

X

Europe's cold snap kills hundreds, affects transport, tourism

Image
© Filippo Monteforte/AFP/Getty Images
A photo taken on February 4, 2012 shows an snowman in front of the ancient Colosseum in Rome after a snowfall.
A weeklong cold snap has now claimed more than 220 lives across Europe, with forecasters warning that the big freeze - which has even blanketed Rome in snow - would tighten its grip over the weekend.

A weeklong cold snap has now claimed more than 220 lives across Europe, with forecasters warning that the big freeze - which has even blanketed Rome in snow - would tighten its grip over the weekend.

A total of 223 people have died from the cold weather in the past seven days, according to Agence France-Presse, in what has become the harshest European winter in decades.

Ukraine suffering the highest toll - with 101 deaths recorded since the cold snap began. Temperatures plummeted as low to -16.6 degrees in the capital Kiev. Poland, Bulgaria and Romania also recorded high death tolls.

According to AFP, the dead included hundreds of homeless people who have frozen to death.

The cold has extended as far south as Serbia, where thousands were trapped under heavy snow and blizzards in the country's mountain villages.

In Italy, up to three inches of snow fell in some districts of the Italian capital, and the Colosseum was closed to prevent visitors slipping on ice or damaging the structure.

Bizarro Earth

Vanuatu - Earthquake Magnitude 6.1

Vanuatu Quake_050212
© USGS
Earthquake Location
Date-Time:
Sunday, February 05, 2012 at 00:15:40 UTC

Sunday, February 05, 2012 at 11:15:40 AM at epicenter

Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones

Location:
18.935°S, 168.923°E

Depth:
163.4 km (101.5 miles)

Region:
VANUATU

Distances:
77 km (47 miles) NNW of Isangel, Tanna, Vanuatu

147 km (91 miles) SSE of PORT-VILA, Efate, Vanuatu

309 km (192 miles) NNE of Tadine, Loyalty Islands, New Caledonia

1882 km (1169 miles) ENE of BRISBANE, Queensland, Australia

Bizarro Earth

Canada: Earthquake Magnitude 5.7 - Vancouver Island

Image
© USGS
Date-Time:
Saturday, February 04, 2012 at 20:05:32 UTC
Saturday, February 04, 2012 at 12:05:32 PM at epicenter
Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones

Location:
48.867°N, 127.876°W

Depth:
12.8 km (8.0 miles)

Region:
VANCOUVER ISLAND, CANADA REGION

Distances:
170 km (105 miles) W of Ucluelet, British Columbia, Canada

206 km (128 miles) S of Port Hardy, British Columbia, Canada

229 km (142 miles) WSW of Campbell River, British Columbia

Nuke

Fukushima: New Radioactive Water Leaks Found

Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant
© AP
This Nov. 12, 2011 photo shows a view of the crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant in Okuma town, Japan.
Leaks of radioactive water have become more frequent at Japan's crippled nuclear power plant less than two months after it was declared basically stable.

The problem underlines the continuing challenges facing Tokyo Electric Power Co. as it attempts to keep the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear plant under control. A massive earthquake and tsunami badly damaged the plant last March, resulting in the melting of three reactor cores.

Workers spotted a leak Friday at a water reprocessing unit which released enough beta rays to cause radiation sickness, TEPCO spokesman Junichi Matsumoto said. He said no one was injured and the leak stopped after bolts were tightened on a tank.

Matsumoto said TEPCO also found that 8.5 tons of radioactive water had leaked earlier in the week after a pipe became detached at Unit 4, one of the plant's six reactors. The company earlier had estimated that only a few gallons (liters) had leaked.

Snowflake

Rare Photographs of the Black Sea Frozen

Image
© EnglishRussia.com
Check out these rare photographs of the Black Sea being frozen. It does happen sometimes but is still considered a natural phenomenon.
Image
© EnglishRussia.com

Cloud Lightning

Australia: Attention turns Downstream as NSW Floodwaters Peak

Image

The flooding in Moree is the worst in 35 years.
More than 17,000 people remain isolated across New South Wales as towns downstream from flooded areas in the state's north-west brace themselves for floodwater headed their way.

There is now major flooding at Gunnedah, where the Namoi River is more than eight metres high and rising.

Floodwaters have peaked at Moree and Wee Waa, but more than 2,000 people have spent another night away from their homes.

Thousands of people remain cut off across the state's north, especially around Gunnedah and Wee Waa.

Authorities are now warning that flood peaks are moving downstream towards towns like Mungindi and Walgett.

Several homes and rural properties in Gunnedah have been inundated.

Snowflake

Europe tries to shield homeless from deep freeze

Image
© Fr LW Gonzales
Russia and Ukraine took extra precautions on Friday to protect homeless people during a brutal cold snap, ordering new facilities and medical care after scores of people have frozen to death on the streets of Europe.

As the death toll from the past week rose to at least 175 on Friday, Russian Emergencies Minister Sergei Shoigu ordered the creation of facilities nationwide to feed and provide medical assistance to the homeless.

The week-long freeze - Eastern Europe's worst in decades - is causing power outages, frozen water pipes and widespread closure of schools, nurseries, airports and bus routes.

Other parts of Europe experienced frigid temperatures unseen in years. A roundup:

Bizarro Earth

US - Fearsome Friday Forecast: Colorado Blizzard & Tornado Threats

Snow in Denver
© Stephanie Pappas
Snow day in Denver! A plow works in De Boer Park to clear snow from today's blizzard.
Six more weeks of winter, eh? The bizarre weather outside is more like spring, with a blizzard in Denver and tornado warnings and watches elsewhere all in the same day.

One day after the groundhog Punxsutawney Phil "forecasted" six more weeks of winter, a potentially record-breaking blizzard is socking Denver today (Feb. 3). By the time the storm passes on Sunday, it could set a February snowfall record in the city. This storm is odd because big snowstorms in Denver are actually more common in spring than winter.

And more springlike weather is sweeping across the southern United States as well, with tornado watches and warnings under way from Oklahoma to Louisiana.

Igloo

Italy: Rare Snow Falls In Rome

On Friday, thick snowflakes fell in Rome on Friday, a rare occurrence for a capital usually blessed by a temperate climate, and other parts of the country experienced frigid temperatures unseen in years. The snowfall prompted authorities to stop visitors from entering the Colosseum, the Roman Forum and the Palatine Hill, the former home of Rome's ancient emperors.
Image
© Reuters
An open top bus travels through a snow storm at the Colosseum, in Rome on Friday.
The director of the Colosseum, Rossella Rea, said the sites were closed out of fears that visitors could slip on ice. The last substantial snowfalls in Rome were in 1985 and 1986, though there have been other cases of lighter snow since then, including in 2010. Snow began falling in the late morning on Friday, leaving a light dusting on trees and cars and forming slush on the roads. It wasn't clear if there would be any significant accumulation on the ground. The north of the country has also been gripped by snow and ice that is disrupting train travel.

Info

Scientists Snare 'Superprawn' off New Zealand

Image
© Agence France-Presse
This photo, released by Oceanlab on February 3, shows a scientist from the University of Aberdeen holding one of the 'supergiant amphipods' off the coast of New Zealand.
Scientists have captured a "supergiant" crustacean in waters seven kilometres (4.5 miles) deep off New Zealand, measuring 10 times the normal size of related species.

The "supergiant amphipod", which resembles a monster prawn, was found during an expedition to the Kermadec Trench north of New Zealand by scientists from the University of Aberdeen and Wellington's NIWA marine research institute.

Amphipods are normally up to three centimetres (around an inch) long and the University of Aberdeen's Alan Jamieson said he was stunned to find the 28 centimetre (11 inch) giant when emptying traps on his research vessel's deck.

"I stopped and thought 'what on earth is that?' whilst catching a glimpse of an amphipod far bigger than I ever thought possible," he said.

"It's a bit like finding a foot-long cockroach."