Earth Changes
"We've got a really bad system starting to develop, just as bad if not worse for tomorrow," NBC weather anchor Al Roker reported on the TODAY show, citing "a strong risk of storms from Huntsville, Alabama, to Indianapolis and on into central Ohio."
Parts of Illinois and Mississippi are also at risk, he noted, and any twisters could be several miles long due to the system's strength.
Twelve people were killed Wednesday in Illinois, Missouri and Tennessee by a system that spawned more than a dozen twisters across the Midwest. Hardest hitwas Harrisburg, Ill., where six people died, some 300 homes were destroyed or damaged, and residents had stories of survival and tragedy.

True winter weather: A man in Pollock Pines, California, takes a stroll in the snow. The Sierra Nevada region received between 6-12 inches of snow in a storm that started Wednesday and should go through the night
The blast from the Gulf of Alaska was expected to bring up to 5 feet of snow at the highest elevations of the northern Sierra Nevada, delighting skiers and the 28million Californians who depend on snowmelt to meet their water needs.
'It's a pretty typical storm, it's just not typical this year,' said Johnnie Powell, a forecaster with the National Weather Service in Sacramento.
Officials issued avalanche warnings in the high Sierra mountains as the storm that began in earnest just after midnight was supposed to keep hammering the Lake Tahoe area, the northeast part of the state and the counties surrounding Yosemite National Park well into Thursday.

Judy Hudnall sifted through the debris left from Wednesday morning's storm in Henderson, Ky.
Hardest hit late Tuesday and early Wednesday was Harrisburg, Ill., a city of 9,000 where at least six people were killed after a tornado with winds measuring up to 170 miles an hour barreled through the downtown just before dawn, leveling buildings, such as the shopping mall above, and ripping off roofs.
"We had a 40-foot section of wall, which covered patients' rooms, just ... blown away, it's gone," said Vince Ashley, chief executive of Harrisburg Medical Center. A warning call 20 minutes before the storm gave the hospital time to evacuate patient rooms and avoid casualties.
Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn declared Harrisburg a disaster area. Authorities said as many as 300 homes in Harrisburg were damaged or destroyed, and Mr. Ashley said his emergency room treated at least 50 people. "Head injuries, chest injuries, a lot of broken bones, everything down to cuts and bruises," he said.
Emergency officials said one person was dead from the storm in Cumberland County, Tenn., according to the Associated Press. At least 12 people were killed by the storms overall, the AP reported.

The Global Seed Vault opened in 2008 on Svalbard, Norway, above the Arctic Circle.
This week, the Doomsday Seed Vault in Norway is scheduled to receive nearly 25,000 samples of seeds from around the world, including those of grains that grow on one of the world's highest mountain ranges and a plant whose stems redden an Ecuadorean drink on the "Day of the Dead."
With these additions the now four-year-old vault, formerly known as the Svaldbard Global Seed Vault, would house more than 740,000 samples in an Arctic mountain on the Svaldbard archipelago.
"Our crop diversity is constantly under threat, from dramatic dangers such as fires, political unrest, war and tornadoes, as well as the mundane, such as failing refrigeration systems and budget cuts. But these seeds are the future of our food supply, as they carry genetic treasure such as heat resistance, drought tolerance or disease and pest resistance," Cary Fowler, executive director of the Global Crop Diversity Trust, one of the entities responsible for the vault, said in a news release.
The vault is intended to act as a backup for living crop collections around the world; a fire in January destroyed unique varieties of bananas, yams, sweet potatoes and taro being duplicated at the National Plant Genetic Resources Laboratory in the Philippines, according to the trust.
Eyewitness reports, images and video suggest that a weak tornado touched down yesterday (Feb. 29) in a remote part of the state. The storm didn't cause any damage, said National Weather Service (NWS) meteorologist Kenny Roberg, so that may be all the evidence that storm survey teams have to rate the storm. Storm survey teams are similar to forensic scientists; they assess the damage caused by severe storms and determine if tornadoes - or merely strong winds - are to blame.
The potential twister hit at 10:13 local time (11:13 EST) in Logan County, Neb., according to the Storm Prediction Center in Norman, Okla. An off-duty NWS employee reported the tornado.
Roberg said his NWS office in North Platte, Neb., checked their tornado records, and this is the first tornado known to hit Nebraska during the month of February. Tornado records began in 1950, so one could have struck before then. It's also possible that a February tornado has struck since 1950, but if it hit a remote part of the state, it could have easily gone unrecorded.
At about 8:30 a.m. today, Central time, a magnitude 5.7 quake ocurred near the island of Honshu, 77 miles east southeast of Tokyo , according to the U.S. Geological Survey. The Geological Survey's PAGER earthquake risk site indicates this most recent tembler may have been perceived as moderate shaking by 962,000 people in Japan, and may have caused some moderate damage to vulnerable buildings.
Ten of the deaths occurred in Harrisburg, Ill., officials said in updating an earlier death toll of three. A possible tornado swept through the town around 5 a.m. local time, destroying 35-40 homes, according to local TV station KFVS12.
Three other deaths were reported in Missouri, where storms included a suspected tornado that hit a mobile home park outside the town of Buffalo. One person died there and around a dozen people were injured. Two others died in the Cassville and Puxico areas.
The rough weather also knocked out power to all of Buffalo's 3,000 residents.
At least 8 people were injured when a suspected tornado ripped through Harveyville, Kan., on Tuesday night, NBC News reported. At least three of the injured are in critical condition, according to weather.com, and 40 percent of the town suffered damage.
NBC affiliate KSHB TV reported that an apartment complex and a church were among the damaged buildings in the town of about 250 people.
The hype appears to have started with these videos from Kiev, Ukraine, posted on 3 August and 11 August 2011, respectively. (Although, as we'll see later, these were not the first accounts.)
(See here for a translation of the uploader's account of the sounds and analysis and here for a summary of the associated thread, with additional analyses and accounts.)
Dozens of videos have been uploaded since then, some obviously faked, others perhaps not. For example, at least 28 videos posted in the months since Kiev obviously use the sound from the original video played over random video footage, sometimes with staged 'Oh-my-God-what-is-that?' dialogue. And, no, as far as I can tell, none of them use samples from the films Red State or War of the Worlds, as some have claimed. The similarity is striking (trumpet-like blasts, metallic rumbles and such), but truth has been known to resemble fiction. And it wouldn't be the first time that similar strange noises have been heard, both in recent times and the murky depths of history recorded in myth and legend.
I'm not a scientist -- I don't even play one on TV.
But even with my limited knowledge of the scientific world, I know enough to say without fear of reprisal that two-headed fish are not generally an indicator of a healthy watershed. The two-headed fish in question is a trout and was just one of many abnormal fish that were regulated to an appendix of a scientific study commissioned by the J.R. Simplot Company.
Despite the presence of fish with two heads and fish with facial, fin, and egg deformities, the mining company's report concluded that the waters it is accused of polluting in southern Idaho are fairly safe. So safe in fact that the company feels it would be just peachy to allow the water's high selenium (a metal byproduct of mining that is toxic to wildlife) levels to remain as is, even though they are higher than are permitted under regulatory guidelines.
In a move that's stranger than a multi-headed fish, the EPA actually described the mining company's report as "comprehensive." This led many scientists to shake their single head in disbelief and call for further investigation. Among those that found the EPA's assessment fishy was Democrat Senator Barbara Boxer of California, who heads the chamber's Environment and Public Works Committee. According to the New York Times, she requested the federal Fish and Wildlife Service to go over the initial report. The agency did and concluded that the study was "biased" and "highly questionable."









Comment: The reader might be interested in this article: "Doomsday Seed Vault" - Bill Gates, Rockefeller and the GMO giants know something we don't?