Earth ChangesS


Bizarro Earth

New Zealand: 5.7 quake felt in Southland

An earthquake measuring 5.7 on the Richter scale shook Southland tonight.

GNS Science said the quake happened at 7.28pm, 360km southwest of Invercargill at a depth of 33km. It was felt in Riverton.

Bizarro Earth

5-magnitude earthquake jolts Taiwan

A 5-magnitude earthquake struck Taiwan Thursday, said the local weather bureau.

The quake occurred at 5:01 p.m. about 26.3 km southeast of Suao in the northeastern Ilan county, with its epicenter 31.5 km underground, according to the bureau.

The tremor was felt in Taipei.

Attention

Climate Change - The mystery deepens: Where did that decline go?

Image
© Joannenova
Frank Lansner has done some excellent follow-up on the missing "decline" in temperatures from 1940 to 1975, and things get even more interesting. Recall that the original "hide the decline" statement comes from the ClimateGate e-mails and refers to "hiding" the tree ring data that shows a decline in temperatures after 1960. It's known as the "divergence problem" because tree rings diverge from the allegedly measured temperatures. But, Frank shows that the peer reviewed data supports the original graphs, and that real measured temperatures did decline from 1960 onwards...sharply. Yet, in the GISS version of that period, temperatures from the cold 1970's were repeatedly "adjusted" years later, and progressively made warmer.

The most mysterious period is from 1958 to 1978, when a steep 0.3C decline was initially recorded in the Northern Hemisphere. Years later, this was reduced so far it became a mild warming against the detailed corroborating Raobcore evidence. Raobcore measurements are balloon readings. How accurate are they? They started in 1958, twenty years before satellite temperature records (which are renowned for their accuracy). Put the two methods side-by-side, and they tie together neatly, telling us that both of them are accurate, reliable tools.

Bizarro Earth

Magnitude 5.6 - South of the Fiji Islands

Fiji
© USGSEarthquake Location
Date-Time:
Thursday, March 18, 2010 at 09:14:07 UTC

Thursday, March 18, 2010 at 09:14:07 PM at epicenter

Location:
23.352°S, 177.195°W

Depth:
168.3 km (104.6 miles)

Distances:
315 km (195 miles) SW of NUKU'ALOFA, Tonga

335 km (210 miles) SSE of Ndoi Island, Fiji

620 km (385 miles) SSW of Neiafu, Tonga

1680 km (1050 miles) NNE of Auckland, New Zealand

Magnify

High Levels of Mercury Found in Cataraqui River, Kingston, Ontario, Canada

Image
© Michael OnesiStudent Nathan Manion took part in the Queen's study that examined the sediment of the Cataraqui River.
The Inner Harbour on the Cataraqui River in Kingston, Ont., has mercury levels in sediment more than two times the Canadian government's most severe effect limits, according to a Queen's University study.

"Mercury levels in this part of the river have never been studied before," says biology professor Linda Campbell. "Now we know the sources of the problem and just how widespread it is."

Most of the western shore of the Cataraqui River south of Belle Park and above the LaSalle Causeway Bridge had levels of contamination, with the worst area around the Cataraqui Canoe Club, just south of the former Davis Tannery.

Over the past century, the area has been home to many industries, such as a coal gasification plant, tannery and lead smelter, municipal dump, textile mill and fuel depot. The report found rain is washing contaminated shoreline soil near the canoe club into the river, adding to the sediment already contaminated by decades of industry.

Umbrella

A Third of U.S. is Waterlogged and Ripe for Flooding

Flood risk map
© NOAA2010 National Hydrologic Assessment
One-third of the United States faces the possibility of "historic flooding" in coming weeks, especially the upper Midwest states of North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota and Iowa, government forecasters said.

"Once again we are delivering an urgent message to get ready," John Hayes, director of the National Weather Service, said in a conference call yesterday. "The flood risk is above-average over one-third of the country."

The flood potential is driven in part by El Nino, a warming in the Pacific Ocean, which steered storms that have left the ground saturated from record rains and heavy snows. The area designated for above-average risk stretches from New Mexico to Maine, federal maps show.

"We are looking at potentially historic flooding in some parts of the country this spring," Jane Lubchenco, administrator for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, said in the conference call.

Many areas of the eastern U.S. have received twice the normal amount of rain in the past three months, said Tom Graziano, a weather service hydrologist.

Meteor

Best of the Web: Cosmic Climate Change: Yellow snow falls in Russia's far east, again

Image
Valeriy Melnikov
The Amur region in Russia's Far East was hit by yellow snow, Elena Pechkina, a regional meteorologist, told RIA Novosti on Friday.

High winds in Mongolia mixed the clouds from a front with dust and sand, crossed northern China, and then dumped the unique-colored snow in Russia.

"This type of precipitation is not harmful to the residents of the area and no additional analyses will be done," Pechkina said.

She said this type of snow was not rare, however usually falls in the region at the end of March or early April.

Comment: Four years ago Sott.net published this: Comet dust build-up? South Korea gets rare yellow snowfall

Two years ago we noticed this: Yellow snowfall over western Siberia

Just last week we reported an incident of purple snowfall, again in Russia.

Of course, they'll say it was the "high winds from Mongolia" that produced this effect, and that explanation will suffice for most. Some however, have looked closer...
From 25 July to 23 September, 2001, in Kerala, India, red rain sporadically fell, staining clothes with an appearance similar to that of blood. Yellow, green, and black rain was also reported. The rains were the result of the atmospheric disintegration of a comet, according to a study conducted at the School of Pure and Applied Physics of the MG University by Dr Godfrey Louis and his student Santosh Kumar. The red rain cells were devoid of DNA which suggests their extra-terrestrial origin. The findings published in the international journal Astrophysics and Space Science state that the cometary fragment contained a dense collection of red cells.



Arrow Down

Climate Change - Hide the decline and rewrite history?

Human emissions of carbon dioxide began a sharp rise from 1945. But, temperatures, it seems, may have plummeted over half the globe during the next few decades. Just how large or how insignificant was that decline?

Frank Lansner has found an historical graph of northern hemisphere temperatures from the mid 70's, and it shows a serious decline in temperatures from 1940 to 1975. It's a decline so large that it wipes out the gains made in the first half of the century, and brings temperatures right back to what they were circa 1910. The graph was not peer reviewed, but presumably it was based on the best information available at the time. In any case, if all the global records are not available to check, it's impossible to know how accurate or not this graph is. The decline apparently recorded was a whopping 0.5°C.

But, three decades later, by the time Brohan and the CRU graphed temperatures in 2006 from the same old time period, the data had been adjusted (surprise), so that what was a fall of 0.5°C had become just a drop of 0.15°C. Seventy percent of the cooling was gone.

Maybe they had good reasons for making these adjustments. But, as usual, the adjustments were in favor of the Big Scare Campaign, and the reasons and the original data are not easy to find.

Bizarro Earth

Magnitude-4.4 quake shakes Alaska

Rampart -- A small earthquake shook north-central Alaska on Tuesday.

The Alaska Earthquake Information Center says a magnitude-4.4 temblor struck at 4:23 a.m. about 31 miles north of Rampart and 36 miles west of Stevens Village.

The center said Tuesday it has not received any reports of the quake being felt or causing damage.

Bizarro Earth

Magnitude-4.4 quake shakes California, Oregon

Los Angeles - - The United States Geological Survey said that Los Angeles had witnessed a small earthquake of magnitude 4.4 on the Richter scale. The earthquake shook the region, at around 4am local time, or 7 are Eastern Time. It happened around 10 miles east of Los Angeles. It was said to be a shallow earthquake, as the depth of the earthquake was measured by the United Stares Geological Survey, to be around 11 miles.

The USGS also divulged that people felt the impact of the earthquake from San Diego to Santa Clarita. There have been no reports of casualties or any damage to property, as the earthquake was a small one. However the county's fire and rescue officials are still not taking things easy, and they are doing their job diligently, and surveying the area to make sure, that there are no earthquake victims who need their help.