Earth Changes
Frozen waters in Maine have left lobstermen stuck on the mainland again this week.
The boats are sitting frozen and stuck and ice is preventing many lobstermen from leaving the harbor.
Some say it's been at least three weeks since they have been able to get out on the water and that the deep freeze is really starting to hurt their very livelihoods.
The Saudi Red Crescent has reinforced its teams with extra officials to take care of the large numbers of people who are enjoying the snow. The Civil Defense has issued early warnings to alert people to take care and follow safety measures in such extreme weather conditions.
Khaled AlEnaizi spokesman of the Saudi Red Crescent in Tabuk said 11 teams had been assigned to parks and locations of heavy snowfalls where citizens and residents are out around the clock.
A city plow truck fell into the hole Sunday afternoon while clearing the intersection of N. Glenellen Ave. and Burbank Ave. in Youngstown.
A tow truck had to pull out the snow plow, which had gone straight through the pavement. The hole has since been patched with dry material.
The accident happened at the same place where a water main broke the week of Feb. 15.
A mum has demanded tighter safety controls at West Midlands Safari Park after a charging rhino smashed into her vehicle - with her screaming toddler inside.
The two tonne beast caused £500-worth of damage to Vicky Liggins' Mitsubishi Warrior during the heart-stopping attack at the tourist attraction in Bewdley, Worcestershire.
"Few of us like to be the first to take the plunge. We hold back at the water's edge, waiting for others to dive in. Clouds are much the same, as is demonstrated by the phenomenon of a 'fallstreak hole'.
Layers of high cloud, such as cirrocumulus or the high altocumulus, shown above, are often composed of water that is much colder than 0degC but hasn't frozen into ice crystals. When water is in the form of tiny droplets suspended in the air, it can behave rather differently from that in an ice tray in the freezer. It can stubbornly refuse to freeze, remaining as 'supercooled' liquid at temperatures of - 10, - 15, - 20degC... None of the droplets want to be the first to freeze, and they tentatively wait as liquid, until some brave souls decide to make their move.
Comment: This phenomenon nothing new, but it is certainly strange. The "experts" like to explain it away as being caused by airplanes, but could it be that our atmosphere isn't doing exactly what the experts think it is? See also:
- Hole Punch Clouds Seen Over Southern New York
- NASA Releases Spectacular Images of Mysterious 'Hole Punch' Clouds
- Triple Punch Hole Clouds
- What is this weird thing in the sky above Stockton, California?
"We just came down the stairs and little sea lions are being washed on to shore dying," Neda Soderqvist says in a video she posted on her Facebook Page after making the discovery with her family at State Dume State Beach.
"It was devastating to see a bunch of sea lions just lyind dead. It wasn't one or two it was six or eight," Soderqvist said to FOX 11's Christine O'Donnell.
The sight was especially difficult for her seven-year-old daughter Isabella Soderqvist. "They came up and just died right in front of us," Isabella said. "I was crying to my mom and I said I was really emotional so i wanted to go."
Avalanches caused by a heavy winter snow have killed at least 124 people in north-eastern Afghanistan, an emergency official said on Wednesday, as rescuers clawed through debris with their hands to save those buried beneath.
The avalanches buried homes across four north-east provinces, killing those beneath, said Mohammad Aslam Syas, the deputy director of the Afghanistan natural disaster management authority. The province worst hit appeared to be Panjshir province, about 100km (60 miles) north-east of the capital, Kabul, where the avalanches destroyed or damaged around 100 homes, Syas said.
The acting governor of Panjshir, Abdul Rahman Kabiri, said rescuers used their bare hands and shovels in an effort to reach survivors. Rescue teams had been dispatched to the affected areas and casualties were expected to rise, Syas said.
The heavy snowstorms, which began early Tuesday, hampered rescue efforts. Snowfall from the storm was nearly one meter (3ft) deep in places and fallen trees blocked roads in the Panjshir Valley.
General Abdul Aziz Ghirat, the provincial police chief of Panjshir, said the death toll from the avalanches was expected to rise when rescue attempts resumed at sunrise Thursday.
The quake, with its epicenter around 290km (175 miles) southeast of Hachijo-jima, Izu Islands, struck at a depth of 65km (38 miles).
LATEST: 5.7 earthquake 294 km SE of Hachijo-jima, southern #Japan. No tsunami warning issued http://t.co/q0T3f4PwCf pic.twitter.com/3xbkJRxN3l
— RT (@RT_com) February 25, 2015The event comes just hours after another 4.4 quake took place just off the Kuril Islands, disputed with Russia.
The tremors also come a day after another quake struck off the eastern coast, measuring 5.8, with the epicenter about 100km east of the city of Miyako.
Matt Meehan, who lives in the city, told CBS Miami - which first reported on the shaking - 'These windows started ratting like this. And I'm looking around, and I have a little cat [that] went running in the other direction.'
'My first thought was earthquake,' he told the television station.
Another resident, Boo Zamek, told the CBS affiliate it was a 'very low, um, very subtle vibration' and called it 'strange, curious.'
A spokeswoman for the Coral Gables police department, Kelly Denham, told Daily Mail Online that police received two reports in the past four weeks regarding the 'loud explosion-type noises,' as well as a third report shortly before 11am Tuesday.
Officers have checked out the sounds each time, Denham said, but they have so far been unable to locate their source.
'We have no idea what those noises are,' Denham said.
From New York to Newfoundland, coastal waters rose by as much as 128 millimeters - more than five inches - over the two-year span, states the report, which will be published in an upcoming issue of Nature Communications.
"The extreme sea level rise event during 2009-10 along the northeast coast of North America is unprecedented during the past century," Professor Jianjun Yin of the University of Arizona told BBC News.
"Statistical analysis indicates that it is a 1-in-850 year event."
The extreme rise caused flooding all along the northeast coast, and as far south as Cape Hatteras off the coast of North Carolina, Phys.org reported.
Comment: Coastal communities appear to be very unsafe areas to reside at this time. It would be safer for most individuals to move inland to avoid the threat of flooding that coastlines are experiencing.

















Comment: See also: Keeper at UK's Whipsnade Zoo trampled by rhino