Earth Changes
AccuWeather senior meteorologist Alan Reppert said the entire country should prepare for "damaging winds" through winter. He warned: "A stormy weather pattern will set in before wintertime with active weather during the second half of October across the United Kingdom." Mr Reppert added: "At least one named windstorm is expected during this time before a lull in November. However, storm systems may still bring locally heavy rainfall at times during the month. The most active period of weather will be during the official winter months from December through February."
Brits have been told to expect a choppy run up to Christmas with wet and windy weather stretching through the New Year.
At least 19 people have been killed in the US by the hurricane across four Southeast states according to authorities. At least eight people were killed in North Carolina; three people were killed in Georgia; six people were killed in Florida; and at least two people were killed in South Carolina.
Local residents may have underestimated the severity of Hurricane Matthew, because it was downgraded to a Category 3 just before hitting landfall in Florida on Friday. It was again downgraded to a Category 1 when it hit South Carolina on Sunday. Regardless of its categorization, Hurricane Matthew still wreaked havoc in the areas it touched. "What those categories don't include is how water can kill," said North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory in an interview with the New York Times.
In North Carolina—the state to receive the worst parts of the storm in the US—more than 1,000 people had to be rescued on Sunday, and more than 3,000 people were moved to shelters. Nearly 770,000 people across North Carolina were left without power. The storm has left more than 2 million businesses and homes without power along the Southeastern coast.

The average number of peacock butterflies seen by participants in the count fell by 42% compared to last year.
If you think you saw fewer butterflies than ever this British summer, you are probably correct: the Big Butterfly Count has recorded its lowest number of common species since records began.
Normally ubiquitous butterflies such as the gatekeeper, comma and small copper experienced their worst summers in the history of the count, which is run by Butterfly Conservation and began in 2010.
Scientists said the low number of butterflies is "a shock and a mystery" because this summer was warmer than average and much drier in England than the previous worst year for butterflies, 2012, which was unusually cold and wet.
"The drop in butterfly numbers this summer has been a shock," said Richard Fox of Butterfly Conservation. "When we have cold, wet summers, as in 2012, we expect butterfly populations to plummet, but that wasn't the case this year.
The 50ft (15m) remains were discovered on Friday (October 7) at Normans Bay by Jez Asfour while out walking his dog.
Rob Deaville, of the Cetacean Strandings Investigation Programme, said that it was most likely to be a Finback Whale, the second largest type of the mammal after the Blue Whale.
Mr Deaville will be collecting bone samples under license, as it is illegal to take any part of a dead whale without one. He said, "We do not normally get access to this tissue."
The zoologist said that it is impossible to tell how the creature died but he was confident that the rope, found wrapped around its tail, was attached to the body after its death.
A 71ft (21m) Finback Whale, which weighed as much as eight double decker buses, washed up on the beach at Pevensey Bay on Novermber 13, 1865.
Reports say as many as 40,000 people flocked to see the creature, the skeleton of which is still on display at Cambridge Museum of Zoology.
For many, in an age before television or the internet, it was the first time they had ever seen a whale.
"The cell just came out of nowhere," says longtime Safford resident, Skyler Evans.
Hail fell and according to Brandie Ybarra who posted a photo on our Facebook page, it broke out windows on two of her vehicles.
National Weather Service meteorologists in the Tucson office estimated the hail was 2 inches in diameter and 6 inches deep in some spots.
"There were definitely people that were scared there were people running and people scared," said Safford resident, Chance Campbell.
Evans said, "it was coming down so hard, you've been in heavy rain that you can't hardly see only it was solid hail. We saw quarter sized, dime size and even softball size hail."
The golf ball sized hail filled Safford, streets, making it look like a winter white out.
The hail storm was also captured in a photo by Valerie Boughner. Her photo shows her yard covered in white.
The deceased were identified as Sada Miah, 37, son of late Siddik Ali Geda Miah of South Dariarpar village, and Basiruddin Mondal, 60, son of late Kasimuddin Mondal of Darikalinagar village in the upazila.
Officer-in-charge of Jhinaigati Police Station Mizanur Rahman said a streak of lightning struck Sada Miah as he was returning home from Dhanshail Bazar amid thunder shower in the evening, leaving him dead on the spot.
In another incident, Basiruddin was injured as a thunderbolt hit him while he was working in a field in the evening.
Later, he was rushed to Jhinaigati Upazila Health Complex where doctors declared him dead, according to a news agency.
Source: ZR
Comment: More and more climate scientists and institutions are being exposed for supporting the global warming myth. See also:
- Oops! Scientists who claimed Arctic ice would melt entirely by September 2016 got it badly wrong
- German geologist accuses NASA of altering temperature records to support the global warming myth
- IPCC global warming propaganda shills reveal themselves
- Global warming propagandists make "breathtaking" adjustments to arctic temperature record
- Climategate 2.0: New E-Mails Rock The Global Warming Debate
- Climategate Redux: NASA and NOAA have been falsifying climate reports for years
- Ice Age cometh: Global cooling consensus is heating up - cooling over the next one to three decades
Valentia Observatory in Co Kerry has recorded its highest level of rainfall on a single day since records began there over 150 years ago.
There was 105.5mm of rain in 24 hours.
Last night's torrential rain led to the closure of a number of roads on the south Kerry peninsula.
A significant land slippage blocked part of the Wild Atlantic Way tourist route between Baile an Sceilg and Portmagee.
A number of houses in the fishing village of Portmagee were badly damaged when flood waters entered during the night.

Men take a bath next to trees downed by Hurricane Matthew in Coteaux, Haiti, October 9, 2016.
Haitian authorities have resorted to burying the dead in mass graves in the aftermath of the devastating Hurricane Matthew, which has killed at least 1,000 people on the island, Reuters reports. Cholera outbreaks have contributed to the dire situation.
The small Caribbean nation, which shares an island with Dominican Republic, has been struggling to deal with the aftermath of the powerful storm that uprooted trees and destroyed houses. Hundreds of people were killed in structure collapse and flooding, with winds blowing at up to 230 kilometers per hour (140 miles per hour).
2016-10-09 19:08:47 UTC
UTC time: Sunday, October 09, 2016 19:08 PM
Your time: 2016-10-09T19:08:47Z
Magnitude Type: mb
USGS page: M 4.8 - Off the coast of Oregon
USGS status: Reviewed by a seismologist
Reports from the public: 5 people
2016-10-09 19:08:47 UTC 4.8 magnitude, 10 km depth














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