Earth ChangesS


Cloud Lightning

Five tornadoes slam Colorado; 1 damages mall

Aurora - The National Weather Service says at least five tornadoes hit Colorado, and one damaged a mall in Aurora on Sunday.

There were no immediate reports of serious injuries.

The Weather Service says the tornado that damaged Southlands Mall touched down south of Buckley Air Force Base at 1:49 p.m. and may have been on the ground for about 30 minutes, going on an 8- to 10-mile path across southeast Aurora.

Bizarro Earth

Earthquake Magnitude 5.0 - Southeastern Alaska

Image
© US Geological Survey
Date-Time:
Sunday, June 07, 2009 at 23:24:39 UTC
Sunday, June 07, 2009 at 03:24:39 PM at epicenter

Location:
58.967°N, 136.719°W

Depth:
37.3 km (23.2 miles)

Region:
SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA

Distances:
60 km (37 miles) SSW (212°) from Mosquito Lake, AK

60 km (38 miles) SW (218°) from Covenant Life, AK

67 km (42 miles) SW (225°) from Klukwan, AK

763 km (474 miles) ESE (103°) from Anchorage, AK

Bizarro Earth

Earthquake Magnitude 5.3 - Chiapas, Mexico

Image
© US Geological Survey
Date-Time:
Sunday, June 07, 2009 at 21:26:47 UTC

Sunday, June 07, 2009 at 04:26:47 PM at epicenter

Location:
16.229°N, 92.779°W

Depth:
147.3 km (91.5 miles)

Region:
Chiapas Mexico

Distances:
60 km (35 miles) SSW of San Cristobal d/l Casas, Chiapas, Mexico

70 km (40 miles) SSE of Tuxtla Gutierrez, Chiapas, Mexico

300 km (185 miles) NW of GUATEMALA CITY, Guatemala

765 km (475 miles) ESE of MEXICO CITY, D.F., Mexico

Evil Rays

Bats Recognize The Individual Voices Of Other Bats

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© Wikimedia, Public domain imageGreater mouse-eared bat. Researchers found that bats can use the characteristics of other bats' voices to recognize each other.
Bats can use the characteristics of other bats' voices to recognize each other, according to a study by researchers from the University of Tuebingen, Germany and the University of Applied Sciences in Konstanz, Germany. The study explains how bats use echolocation for more than just spatial knowledge.

The researchers first tested the ability of four greater mouse-eared bats to distinguish between the echolocation calls of other bats. After observing that the bats learned to discriminate the voices of other bats, they then programmed a computer model that reproduces the recognition behaviour of the bats. Analysis of the model suggests that the spectral energy distribution in the signals contains individual-specific information that allows one bat to recognize another.

Blackbox

Divining intervention: The growing popularity of dowsing

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© Denver PostStorozuk's custom license tag speaks to his water-witching ways.
Two L-shaped metal rods slowly spin in Greg Storozuk's clenched fists as he gently steps through the grass near Sloan's Lake.

"The answer is already known," he says.

The rods rotate into a wide Y. Beneath bushy brows, Storozuk's blue eyes stare vacantly at the horizon. He stops walking.

"Good flowing drinking water. About four gallons a minute. Pretty close to five. Flowing this direction," he says as the rods rotate into a straight line.

Bizarro Earth

Earthquake Magnitude 5.3 - Central Peru

Image
© US Geological Survey
Date-Time:
Saturday, June 06, 2009 at 21:51:13 UTC

Saturday, June 06, 2009 at 04:51:13 PM at epicenter

Location:
8.734°S, 74.686°W

Depth:
63.4 km (39.4 miles)

Distances:
43 km (26 miles) SSW (203°) from Pucallpa, Peru

210 km (131 miles) NE (51°) from Huanuco, Peru

254 km (158 miles) WSW (242°) from Cruzeiro do Sul, Brazil

455 km (283 miles) NE (35°) from Lima, Peru

Arrow Up

It's Not a Triffid, It's A Six Meter High Fungus

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© unknownEven these giant (concrete) mushrooms pale in comparison with the 8 meter high fungi from 400 million years ago
We are used to seeing the occasional large mushroom or toadstool in our garden. I've seen pictures of Macrocybe titans ('titan' means big, like the giant Titan Arum flower from Indonesia) on the internet that seem to be about a meter tall, apparently weighing in at 20 kg.

But a six meter high fungus? We need to go back a few millennium. Scientists in the UK discovered fossilized trees from one of the first forests on earth, dating back nearly 400 million years. These trees emerged from a world of early plants barely a few centimeters tall.

But not everything was small. In this ancient forest near Rhynie in Aberdeenshire, there were what the New Scientist writer James O'Donoghue described last year as 'featureless columns standing up to 8 meters high and a meter wide at the bases'.

Bizarro Earth

Wales: Earthquake hits Port Talbot

A minor earthquake has been felt by a number of homes, police said today.

Concerned residents in south Wales contacted the police shortly before 9pm last night after experiencing lights flickering and a tremor.

The British Geological Survey later confirmed there had been an earthquake with a magnitude of three with an epicentre just over six miles north east of Port Talbot.

A spokeswoman for South Wales Police said: "We had three reports yesterday evening. Members of the public from the Wild Mill and Sarn area of Bridgend reported feeling a tremor.

"The British Geological Survey confirmed an earthquake had occurred 10km northeast of Port Talbot with a magnitude of three."

Sherlock

Search for Air France Flight 447 Reveals Astonishing Pollution of World's Oceans

The most alarming piece of news this week emerged when investigators of the doomed Air France flight 447 announced they had found "floating debris" from the plane crash, but it turned out to be only floating trash in the ocean. This is, all by itself, a disturbing commentary on the pollution of the world's oceans: When investigators can't find a plane crash in the ocean because there's already too much trash floating on the surface, we have a problem with pollution.

It's as if they went out to find a plane crash, but ended up discovering that our oceans look like a train wreck. Had they peeked under the surface of the water, they might have found untreated dry cleaning chemicals from a cruise ship, raw feces from a military vessel and tiny bits of plastic that pose an extreme risk to marine life.

With this, air travel investigators learned an important lesson: Just because debris is floating in the ocean doesn't mean a plane crashed there. It could just mean humans are destroying the planet. While 228 passengers sadly died in a tragic air travel accident, we might all die if we don't stop polluting our fragile ecosystems with endless trash.

Cloud Lightning

Kilauea Volcanic Lightning

Image
© Stephen O'Meara
On May 19th, adventure photographer Stephen O'Meara was monitoring an eruption of the Rabaul volcano in Papua, New Guinea, when something happened that, he says, "I'll remember for a very long time. A storm cloud approached the volcano's 2 km plume, and lightning began to arc between the two." He set up his camera in a secure location and recorded the "awesome and blinding" spectacle.

This isn't the first time lightning has been observed around a volcano. Recent examples include Alaska's Mt. Redoubt, Chile's Chaitin volcano and Kilauea in Hawaii. Clouds of water vapor shoot out of these volcanoes in a dusty mixture likened to a "dirty thunderstorm," and lightning emerges from within the turbulent plume.