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Wed, 27 Oct 2021
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Snowflake

Heavy snowfall in Japan - 40 inches dumped on Yamagata overnight

snow
Parts of Japan had their heaviest snow of the season along the Sea of Japan coast last night.

Some parts had 25-40 inches of snow.

As you can imagine travel was disrupted across the entire area.

Shinjo in the northern prefecture of Yamagata got 40″ of snow.

Tokyo has not seen any snow yet this season. That may change this weekend with a chance of snow in the forecast.


Ice Cube

Both Arctic & Antarctic sea ice at historically high levels

icebergs towed Antarctica to South Africa
© Reuters
Huge icebergs could be towed from Antarctica to Cape Town to solve South Africa's worst drought in a century.

Contrary to claims that modern day sea ice changes are "unprecedented", alarming, and well outside the range of natural variability, biomarker proxies used to reconstruct both Arctic and Antarctic sea ice conditions since the Early Holocene increasingly reveal that there is more extensive Arctic and Antarctic sea ice during recent decades than for nearly all of the last 10,000 years.

Antarctic Sea Ice Extent

According to Comiso Et Al., 2017, "Antarctic Sea Ice Extent Has Been Slowly Increasing Contrary To Expected Trends Due To Global Warming And Results From Coupled Climate Models."

'After A Record High Extent In 2012 The Extent Was Even Higher In 2014. ... [T]He Trend In Sea Ice Cover Is Strongly Influenced By The Trend In Surface Temperature [Cooling]."

Comment: Results like these further support the overall trend, measured all over the globe, that our planet is undergoing serious cooling: And for an idea as to why this may be occurring check out: Professor Valentina Zharkova explains and confirms why a "Super" Grand Solar Minimum is upon us as well as SOTT radio's: Behind the Headlines: Earth changes in an electric universe: Is climate change really man-made?


Compass

Earth's magnetic field is shifting rapidly and geologists don't know why

magnetic field map
© Source: World Data Center for Geomagnetism/Kyoto Univ.
Erratic motion of north magnetic pole forces experts to update model that aids global navigation.
Something strange is going on at the top of the world. Earth's north magnetic pole has been skittering away from Canada and towards Siberia, driven by liquid iron sloshing within the planet's core. The magnetic pole is moving so quickly that it has forced the world's geomagnetism experts into a rare move.

On 15 January, they are set to update the World Magnetic Model, which describes the planet's magnetic field and underlies all modern navigation, from the systems that steer ships at sea to Google Maps on smartphones.

The most recent version of the model came out in 2015 and was supposed to last until 2020 - but the magnetic field is changing so rapidly that researchers have to fix the model now. "The error is increasing all the time," says Arnaud Chulliat, a geomagnetist at the University of Colorado Boulder and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA's) National Centers for Environmental Information.

Comment: It's not just the poles that are wandering, our Sun is becoming quieter and its rotation is slowing down, Earth's magnetic field is weakening and its rotation is also slowing, and, in tandem, there are many a great many other sights and shifts on our planet confounding mainstream science: Also check out SOTT radio's: Behind the Headlines: Earth changes in an electric universe: Is climate change really man-made?


Snowflake

Massive snowstorms continue in Austria and the Northern Alps - 10 feet of snow in 7 days for one resort

snow Austria
There has been a huge amount of snow falling across the northern European Alps over the past couple of weeks with resorts in Austria bearing the brunt of the storm. While there have been a few epic powder days in some resorts, there is literally too much snow in other areas with roads and train lines cut.

We've been talking about big snowfalls in Whistler, California and Japan, but the seven-day totals in parts of Austria are really impressive - the resort of Tauplitz reporting over three metres (10 feet), while Solden's upper slopes now have a base of over four metres after 70cms fell in the past few days.




Cloud Lightning

Lightning strikes kill 110 in Cambodia last year - 37% increase from 2017

lightning
© Johannes Plenio
Lightning strikes claimed 110 lives in Cambodia in 2018, up 37 percent from 80 deaths recorded a year earlier, a disaster control spokesman said on Tuesday.

Besides fatalities, thunderbolts injured 82 others last year, up 28 percent from 64 in the year before, said Keo Vy, spokesman for the National Committee for Disaster Management.

"The increase in casualties from lighting strikes last year was due to the surge in rainfall amounts," he told Xinhua. "Moreover, Cambodia had suffered more from the impact of tropical storms."

The spokesman said the Southeast Asian nation had experienced the impact of 29 storms in 2018.

Snowflake

Storm packing snow and rain paralyzes parts of Lebanon

flood
Among those affected are tens of thousands of Syrian refugees

A winter storm packing heavy rain and snow has turned streets in Lebanon into rivers of water and mud and paralyzed parts of the country.

Among those affected Tuesday are tens of thousands of Syrian refugees many of whom live in tent settlements.

In the eastern Bekaa Valley, Syrian refugees stayed indoors next to diesel or wood heaters as snow covered their flimsy tents.

Authorities closed the highway linking Beirut with the Syrian capital Damascus after parts of it that cut through high mountains became covered with snow.


Doberman

Man mutilated by 3 rottweilers dies in Madrid

The incident reportedly occurred on the Villaverde de Vallecas road (file image).

The incident reportedly occurred on the Villaverde de Vallecas road (file image).
An 81-year-old has died after being attacked and mutilated on Saturday by three Rottweiler dogs in Madrid.

The incident reportedly occurred on Calle Villaverde de Vallecas.

The victim, who had Alzheimer's disease, passed away last night (Monday) at the La Paz Hospital.

The deceased was said to have had very serious injuries - his arms were in a 'catastrophic condition' and both of his legs had been torn.

The owner of the Rottweilers was arrested a few hours after the incident occurred as none of the dogs had been microchipped and the animal documentation was not in order.

Cow

Signs and Portents: One-eyed newborn cow declared 'miracle of God', worshipped in India

cow mutant
A newborn calf has been declared as a "miracle of God" and is being worshipped in eastern India.

"Ever since it was born, people have crowded my place to see the bizarre calf," its owner said.

Despite the divine qualities attributed to it by the Indians, the poor animal was just born with a birth defect called cyclopia, a rare congenital disorder that occurs in both humans and animals.

The nose of the calf, which was born in the Bardhaman district of West Bengal, is also deformed and it has an underdeveloped jaw.


Tornado2

Out-of-season tornado hits Ohio with 100 mph winds

Ohio tornado
© bairshophippies
The tornado that touched down in Trumbull County, Ohio, on Tuesday morning.
A rare, January tornado touched down in northeastern Ohio on Tuesday morning as severe thunderstorms rumbled across the region.

It is very uncommon for tornadoes to occur in this part of the country during January. Only six tornadoes have been reported in January across Ohio between 1950 and 2018.

The tornado was reported near Mosquito Lake, Ohio, around 10:30 a.m. EST and was later confirmed by the National Weather Service to be an EF1 tornado. No one was injured, but winds up to 100 mph damaged a building and knocked down numerous trees.

Another round of severe thunderstorms erupted over Ohio and Pennsylvania on Tuesday afternoon and evening with gusty winds and hail larger than pennies. The storms erupted along the leading edge of the next blast of cold and windy weather.

Snowflake Cold

Unusually low temperatures hit India's southern state of Kerala

Kerala frost
© Kerala Tourism/Twitter
As the snow blanketed north India's Uttrakhand, Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh on Monday, Delhi woke up to a chilly morning with the fog impacting visibility, hitting transport services. While such developments are relatively mundane when it comes to Delhi and northern part of India at this time of the year, what is happening in an otherwise tropical Kerala has left many baffled.

The usually pleasant Kerala hill station of Munnar has been experiencing sub-zero temperatures since the New Year arrived. As per reports, Munnar experienced a dip as low as -3 degrees Celsius the previous Wednesday, which severely affected acres of tea plantations in the region.

Kerala Tourism tweeted frost covered pictures of Munnar with a tweet, "We woke up to a chilly surprise this morning. Take a guess where; it's perhaps our most popular hill station."