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Alarm Clock

Channel Islands hit by biggest earthquake in 90 years

The biggest earthquake in Jersey and Guernsey on the Channel Islands for almost 90 years has struck, with a magnitude of 4.2.

Rumbles of sounds were heard as windows rattled when the quake struck at a depth of seven miles around 12 miles west of St Helier at 12.54pm.
Channel Islands earthquake
© Google
Jersey hit by biggest earthquake in 90 years.
The British Geological Survey (BGS) said it was the largest earthquake to have hit the region since a 5.6-magnitude quake on February 17, 1927.A spokesman for the BGS said it was also felt weakly on the South Coast of England, but only caused "very minor" damage.

One local thought a plane had crashed nearby, while another reported that the impact was enough to make them jump and go outside.

Alarm Clock

USGS: Earthquake Magnitude 6.8 - 129km ESE of Namie, Japan

Earthquake 6.8 Japan
© USGS
Event Time
2014-07-11 19:22:00 UTC
2014-07-12 04:22:00 UTC+09:00 at epicenter

Location
37.069°N 142.364°E depth=13.3km (8.2mi)

Nearby Cities
129km (80mi) ESE of Namie, Japan
131km (81mi) E of Iwaki, Japan
147km (91mi) ENE of Kitaibaraki, Japan
151km (94mi) ENE of Takahagi, Japan
284km (176mi) ENE of Tokyo, Japan

Scientific data

Comment: This is getting uncomfortably close to Fukushima! Namie lies in Fukushima prefecture.


Attention

15-foot-long pilot whale washes up on Hilton Head, South Carolina

Image
A 15-foot-long pilot whale beached itself Thursday morning on Hilton Head Island and died, causing a stir for beachgoers, some of whom tried unsuccessfully to save the mammal.

A necropsy performed on the whale, found near the heel of the island at Port Royal Plantation, did not reveal a cause of death. More tests to check for viruses or other conditions that led to the 700-pound mammal's stranding will be completed in coming weeks, said Jessica Conway, a marine mammal technician with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association.

It was the first pilot whale to be stranded on Beaufort County shores since 2012, when one was found on Hunting Island.

The whale on Hilton Head was found near marker 118 at about 6 a.m. by a beachgoer who notified the Beaufort County Sheriff's Office.

A group of about eight people tried to push the dying whale back into the water, according to an email to The Island Packet from an onlooker. The whale had been thrashing in the surf, but was dead by 7:30 a.m. when volunteers with the island's Sea Turtle Protection Project arrived.


Cloud Lightning

Colorado man struck by lightning while videoing storm

Image
© KDVR/CNN
Just as the camera went black, so did the man’s ability to function.
Next time you venture out to record an intense storm, you may want to keep an eye out for lightning.

Chad Greenless, a resident of Arvade, Colorado was standing on his front porch with a camera in hand, ready to record an intense summer storm Monday night.

It was in the middle of filming that the unexpected happened: Greenless was struck by the very lightning he had set out to record.

It's not the first time an attempt to use technology has resulted in a lightning strike, either. Just last week, a Peterborogh man was struck by lightning when he tried to live tweet a storm.

Eyewitness News reported that Greenless was paralyzed at the moment of contact, but is now slowly recovering at home.


Bizarro Earth

More snakes! Four foot venomous snake found coiled in toilet

snake in toilet alabama
© CNN
A bathroom break for one worker at an Alabama construction office ended with an unexpected scare when he discovered a four-foot long, venomous snake coiled in a toilet.

Willie Harris says he couldn't believe his eyes. "So when I was going to use the restroom, I see a snake around the commode and I'm thinking it was a joke."

But once Harris saw the snake move a few times, he knew this was no laughing matter.

Comment: Reports of snakes being found in toilets have been an alarmingly regular occurrence lately!

Woman bitten by snake while on toilet in Naron, Spain
Man finds snake in Starbucks bathroom
Python living down the toilet
Mystery behind the 3ft snake found in an Exeter, UK toilet
Snake takes over couple's toilet in Brisbane, Australia
Man finds 2ft snake in bathroom of Bideford,UK property


Attention

Deer that attacked woman in Pennsylvania tests positive for rabies

 rabid deer
© Rachel McGough
The deer that attacked a woman in Westmoreland County has tested positive for rabies, according the Pennsylvania Game Commission.

Rachel McGough is the manager at the Sherwin Williams paint store in East Huntingdon Township. She noticed the doe Tuesday morning as she was about to open the store.

"There was a deer standing outside the liquor store," Said McGough. "Thought that was pretty funny, so I took a picture of it. And it started to charge me!"

She didn't know what to think as the doe began pushing her.

"Oh my God! This deer is going to kill me," she said.

McGough says the stuff she was carrying actually helped a little.

"I had a couple of bags with me that I shoved at it trying to get away. One of the bags got looped around its neck, which allowed me to get a couple feet away," said McGough.

Turns out, two guys up at the McDonald's had been watching the deer cross the parking lot and then come over to McGough. They became Good Samaritans when they came running down and tackled the deer.

Arrow Down

Neonicotinoid insecticides linked to recent fall in farmland bird numbers

Image
© Alamy
A barn swallow hunting over a flowering oilseed rape field, Spain.
Research demonstrates for the first time the knock-on effects to other species of class of insecticides known to harm bees

New research has identified the world's most widely used insecticides as the key factor in the recent reduction in numbers of farmland birds.

The finding represents a significant escalation of the known dangers of the insecticides and follows an assessment in June that warned that pervasive pollution by these nerve agents was now threatening all food production.

The neonicotinoid insecticides are believed to seriously harm bees and other pollinating insects, and a two-year EU suspension on three of the poisons began at the end of 2013. But the suspected knock-on effects on other species had not been demonstrated until now.

Peer-reviewed research, published in the leading journal Nature this Wednesday, has revealed data from the Netherlands showing that bird populations fell most sharply in those areas where neonicotinoid pollution was highest. Starlings, tree sparrows and swallows were among the most affected.

Image

Starlings like this one have been impacted by the use of a neonicotinoid chemical according to scientists

Image
© Derek Moore
Tree sparrow

Arrow Down

More than 500 rhino slaughtered by poachers in South Africa in 2014

Image
© Foto24/Getty Images
The carcass of one of the two rhinos after it was shot in The Kruger National Park, South Africa.
Official figures suggest this year will be deadliest yet for rhino, breaking 2013 record of 1,004 deaths

Some 558 rhino have been killed in South Africa already this year, setting the country on course for a gruesome new record number of poaching deaths, wildlife officials said on Thursday.

Despite stepped-up efforts to curb the scourge, the number of animals killed is around 100 higher than at the same point in 2013, a year which saw a record 1,004 deaths.

The vast, tourist-filled Kruger National Park has been hardest hit.

"Since January 2014, 351 rhinos have been poached in the park," the department of environmental affairs said.


Snowflake Cold

Shocking summer return of poor man's polar vortex to eastern U.S. next week

Image
© Washingtonpost.com
Call it the ghost of the polar vortex, the polar vortex sequel, or the polar vortex's revenge. Meteorological purists may tell you it's not a polar vortex at all. However you choose to refer to the looming weather pattern, unseasonably chilly air is headed for parts of the northern and northeastern U.S at the height of summer early next week.

Bearing a haunting resemblance to January's brutally cold weather pattern, a deep pool of cool air from the Gulf of Alaska will plunge into the Great Lakes early next week and then ooze towards the East Coast.

Of course, this is July, not January, so temperatures forecast to be roughly 10 to as much as 30 degrees below average won't have quite the same effect.

But make no mistake, in parts of the Great Lakes and Upper Midwest getting dealt the chilliest air, hoodies and jeans will be required. Highs in this region could well get stuck in the 50s and 60s - especially where there is considerable cloud cover.

Wednesday morning's lows may drop into the 40s over a large part of the central U.S. Remember, this is July!


Phoenix

Hot spot: Yellowstone road melts, sites closed

Yellowstone
© National park Service
Firehole Lake Drive superheated by surrounding thermals
The ever-changing thermal geology of Yellowstone National Park has created a hot spot that melted an asphalt road and closed access to popular geysers and other attractions at the height of tourist season, officials said Thursday.

As they examined possible fixes, park officials warned visitors not to hike into the affected area, where the danger of stepping through solid-looking soil into boiling-hot water was high.

"There are plenty of other great places to see thermal features in the park," Yellowstone spokesman Al Nash said. "I wouldn't risk personal injury to see these during this temporary closure."

Naturally changing thermal features often damage Yellowstone's roads and boardwalks. Steaming potholes in asphalt roads and parking lots - marked off by traffic cones - are fairly common curiosities.

However, the damage to Firehole Lake Drive is unusually severe and could take several days to fix. The 3.3-mile loop six miles north of Old Faithful takes visitors past Great Fountain Geyser, White Dome Geyser and Firehole Lake.

Unusually warm weather for Yellowstone - with high temperatures in the mid-80s - has contributed to turning the road into a hot, sticky mess.

"We've got some ideas. We're going to try them. Our maintenance staff has really looked at the issue," Nash said.