Earth Changes
The video shows the whole area covered in a thick, foam-like substance.
Large chunks of the mysterious substance were captured on video rolling on the ground as if pushed by the breeze.
The people who filmed it said they were amazed by these mysterious substance.
The cameraman said that he has never seen a similar substance before and that he believes the substance is clouds that fell down from the sky.
"I have never seen clouds fall down to the ground. It is strange," he said.
The strangeness of the substance and rarity of such a phenomenon divided YouTube commenters on the logical explanation for the appearance of the thick foam.
Hurricane Newton is heading north-west towards the southern end of the Baja California peninsula with winds of about 75mph (120 km/h).
The US National Hurricane Center (NHC) said Newton could trigger flash floods.
It warned that preparations to protect life and property "should be rushed to completion".
Late on Monday, overcast skies in the Los Cabos municipality gave way to heavy rain and the wind was building in strength.
Twelve shelters opened and motorists queued to fill their cars with fuel ahead of the hurricane's arrival.
The same weather system lashed areas of the south-western state of Guerrero over the weekend before strengthening to a tropical storm.
Torrential rain that began on Saturday caused more than 30 mudslides across the state, forcing main roads to close.
In the resort of Acapulco, floods and landslides affected dozens of homes and schools and about 200 people had to be rescued from a housing complex.
The earthquake struck in the Pacific Ocean near the Commander Islands, just off Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula, on Tuesday.
The epicenter was shallow - just 8 miles below the surface.
It was just over 100 miles south east of Bering Island, in the Commander Islands chain.
No tsunami warning has been issued yet.
But the quake is situated right on the "Ring of Fire" - which is known for it's fearsome volcanoes.
The epicentre is not far from Japan or Alaska.
The East Sussex Wildlife Rescue and Ambulance Service (WRAS) was called out mid-afternoon on Sunday (September 4) to reports of a seabird washed up on the beach.
Volunteers Andrew Loftus and Charlotte Humphreys had a surprise when they turned up and found it to be a red-footed booby.
WRAS founder Trevor Weeks MBE said: "Sunday afternoon saw rescuers rushed out to reports of a seabird on the beach at St Leonards. When they arrived they found a very usual bird.
"After some research the bird turned out to be a red-footed booby. This is a first for us and possibly a first for the UK if it has flown here. We assume it hasn't escaped from anywhere.
The Great Elephant Census was a project that aimed to count all the continent's elephants by air.
90 scientists and 286 crew members have taken part in the ambitious study over the past two years - and the final total was far less than they had estimated.
30 per cent of the wild elephants died between 2007 and 2014 and in certain reserves in Tanzania and Mozambique that number was down 75 per cent due to poaching.
Ecologist Mike Chase told CNN: 'When you think of how many elephants occurred in areas 10 or 20 years ago, it's incredibly disheartening.
'Historically these ecosystems supported many thousands of elephants compared to the few hundreds or tens of elephants we counted.'
As well as the census, Chase and his colleagues have tracked several of the magnificent beasts by attaching GPS satellite collars to them.

Asian black bears are usually herbivorous but have been known to attack humans who trap or kill the animals for traditional medicine
The video, taken in China, shows the animal trapped within a courtyard as men and woman beat it with sticks and pelt it with stones.
According to reports from the country, it had accidentally strayed into the compound and desperate locals tried to keep it penned in fearing it could attack if it managed to escape.
They can be heard screaming as they use long poles to beat the bear away from a wall while others appear to throw stones at the large bear.

White pelicans aren’t normally seen in Puget Sound and birders enthusiasts are trying to find out where these pelicans are visiting from.
Sue Ehler easily spots a squadron of them through her binoculars from over a mile away, coming in for a landing on Puget Sound's Padilla Bay.
"They've got that pure white. It just shines like a bright light out there. More than the other white birds," Ehler says.
Ehler visits this estuary in Northwest Washington every other week from spring to fall with her friend and fellow citizen scientist and retired biologist Matt Kerschbaum. They're volunteers with the Skagit Heron Foraging Study, tracking the health of the largest breeding colony of great blue herons in the Pacific Northwest.
Ehler and Kerschbaum were among the first to notice the pelicans.
"It was like seeing aliens arrive," says Ehler, a seasonal biologist with a degree in ornithology. "It's unprecedented for them to be here, so something really unusual is happening."
White pelicans are different from brown pelicans, a more common summer visitor to coastal Washington. The white pelicans' range stretches across much of the country but not into Western Washington.
Fire officials say the incident happened near the tennis court at Cerritos Regional Park on Bloomfield Avenue on Saturday afternoon, where a family reunion was taking place.
"It was thousands. It was thousands, like this whole grass area was covered with bees," said one park visitor. "They were chasing hundreds of people."
Another earthquake hit Ecuador's capital Quito at 7.22 p.m., local time. While only a 4.6 magnitude earthquake, the fact that it struck the capital again is alarming.
The Geophysical Institute of Ecuador registered it as an earthquake and not an aftershock from the 7.8-magnitude earthquake on April 16.
It added that the epicenter was 11.8 kilometers from Quito and its depth was at only 4.7 kilometers. Many across the city left their buildings and ran to the streets as they feared a major aftershock.
Few farmers would usually complain about rain, but there is such a thing as getting too much and at the wrong time.
Record rainfalls in the past three months in parts of the state have damaged and killed winter crops such as wheat, barley and chickpeas.
The Department of Primary Industries (DPI) said it had been the third wettest winter on record.
Narromine district landowner Greg Broughton said he had lost between 50 and 80 per cent of his crops.
"I've never ever seen it like this at this time of year," Mr Broughton said.













Comment: Hmmm, it's not actually clear whether or not these 'clouds' were seen to fall from above.
It's interesting that there is a nearby water source (a river) because weird foam has been washing into seaside towns all over the world in recent years.
Weird foam has also recently formed after earthquakes, and caught fire in lakes in India!