Earth Changes
The rain began in Izhevsk on Friday, flooding several of the city's central streets and blocking traffic. The city authorities said they were aware of the situation and later reported that public utility services had pumped out the water and cleared the roads of stones brought by the torrents.

After Tuesday’s storm the water of Lake Winnipeg rolled up and over Patricia Beach, leaving hundreds of dead birds behind as the water receded.
After Tuesday's storm the water of Lake Winnipeg rolled up and over Patricia Beach, leaving hundreds of dead birds behind as the water receded.
Michael Almey, who owns a cottage on Patricia Beach, said the birds covered the beach.
After Tuesday's storm the water of Lake Winnipeg rolled up and over Patricia Beach, leaving hundreds of dead birds behind as the water receded.
"They were all obviously drowned, victims of the storm, the surge of the tide," said Almey.
A naturalist on site told us the baby seagulls were too young to fly away during the storm but may have survived had the storm hit a week or two later.
Residents said conservation crews plan to start clean-up Friday.

Al Schultz peers down a sinkhole on July 4, 2014, while his granddaughter Keirra watches from the driveway. The hole appeared in the front of his home in the Gold Hill area of Fairbanks.
Al Schultz on Friday had cordoned off the roughly 4-foot wide hole that appeared in a roadside ditch and covered the opening with wood planks. Schultz didn't have a clear solution to the problem.
"I called about three excavation companies and with the holiday got one to come out and look at it," he said. "We tied a truck hitch to his rope and threw it down there."
But the contractor's rope was too short and the hitch dangled somewhere down the hole, Schultz said. To reach the bottom, Schultz tied another length of rope to the contractors' rope.
They measured 82 feet.
But just what it looked like down there, they didn't know, and Schultz couldn't get a quote for the fix at the time.

Grape vines near Pommard in Burgundy that were seriously damaged after a summer hailstorm in 2013. The hail has struck again this year, ruining up to 70% of the crop.
Hailstones as big as golf balls and strong winds on Saturday lashed France's Côte de Beaune region, which is home to the Santenay, Meursault, Volnay, and Pommard appellations.
"It was like a machine-gun attack," said Anne Parent, who makes Pommard wines, adding that the devastating hail storm lasted a mere three minutes.
It will be several days before winemakers can assess the full damage, but officials said that between 50 and 90 per cent of the harvest may be lost.
Hopes had been high that this year's harvest would be a good one as a wet spring followed by a hot and sunny June had provided perfect conditions for winegrowers.
Kelsey Birchell, a fire information officer with the Bureau of Land Management, did not say how many people are being evacuated but did say the evacuations are mandatory; they are calling the blaze the Taylor Mountain Road Fire.
Fire officials tweeted that the evacuations are for Taylor Mountain Road and Steinaker Reservoir, and they stated Highway 191 is under vehicle restrictions.
As of about 4:30, 20 engines, one type 1 helicopter, three heavy air tankers and various other resources have been dispatched to the fire. Photos from FOX 13 News viewers show the scene.
The heavy rain, which was caused by a deep area of low pressure over central and northern Spain, saw the river Baztan unable to cope with a flow of 350 cubic meters per second and its level rose to almost four meters, flooding the heart of Elizondo, where several people needed to be rescued from their homes and cars were carried away by the strength of the floodwater.
This is the latest incident in what has been a chaotic 48 hours in terms of weather in Spain.
Tuesday saw a spectacular hailstorm leave around one meter of ice in the streets of the town of Almazan, which is in the province of Soria.
The hailstorm lasted around 45 minutes and caused flooding of homes and businesses, as well as blocking roads, leading to traffic chaos.
There were reports of hail one metre deep next to the Duero river. Local police, the civil guard and firefighters used snow ploughs to help clear the streets. But you're probably thinking, how can hail in summer when it's hot?
How does hail form?
Within a cumulonimbus cloud, there are many particles of ice and super-cooled water - water that remains in liquid form at temperatures below freezing due to a lack of condensation nuclei for them to freeze around.
Ice tends to be at near the top of the cloud, where the air temperature can be as low as minus 60C. Super-cooled water tends to be nearer the bottom half of the cloud, where temperatures are closer to freezing.

Firefighters evacuated two buildings in West Town after a patio leading to the main building collapsed into a sinkhole 10 feet deep.
The Department of Buildings says it is now working with the building owners who, officials said, are taking full responsibility and control of the situation. Tenants are being relocated as crews evaluate the patio.
Tenants said the collapse at 1 a.m. Friday at 1421 West Chicago Avenue sounded like a bomb. An entire concrete section between the main building and a coach house fell 10 feet into a what the landlord described as an unused, old, underground walkway. Patio furniture and air conditioning units also fell into the sinkhole, which measures 20 feet wide and 20 feet long.
No one was on the patio when it collapsed and no one was injured in the incident. Firefighters had to evacuate three people from the coach house since the patio was their only entrance. Fire crews broke through the back of the carriage house to do that.
A California water rush is on, as water is being auctioned for millions and aquifers are depleted.
According to state records, two water districts in California are beginning to auction off their private supplies of water. The two landowners in charge have reportedly made millions off their water stashes. The Buena Vista Water Storage District has already raked in about $13.5
million from the auction of 12,000 acre-feet of water this year.
Upon hearing the news, at least 40 other land owners have begun to prepare for a massive sell-off of their surplus water storage. Drilling for water has become more important than drilling for oil, as water banks are drained at an alarming rate.
The demand for California water is at an all-time high. In the past five years, the price of water has spiked tenfold. An acre-foot of water can now go for $2,200 in drought-stricken regions. As the aquifers are depleted to the highest bidder, it's only a matter of time before the less fortunate are put at the mercy of those who have a hand on the water tap.
Some are calling on new state regulations to ensure that the water distribution remains transparent. "If you have a really scarce natural resource that the state's economy depends on, it would be nice to have it run efficiently and transparently," said Richard Howitt, professor emeritus at the University of California, Davis.
Others believe that the free market is more capable of controlling the price of the important natural resource. "We think that buyers and sellers can negotiate their own deals better than the state," said Nancy Quan, a supervising engineer with the California Department of Water Resources.
2014-07-05 09:39:30 UTC
2014-07-05 15:39:30 UTC+06:00 at epicenter
Location
1.995°N 97.015°E depth=30.0km (18.6mi)
Nearby Cities
88km (55mi) SE of Sinabang, Indonesia
198km (123mi) W of Sibolga, Indonesia
204km (127mi) SW of Kabanjahe, Indonesia
241km (150mi) SW of Binjai, Indonesia
534km (332mi) WSW of Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Scientific data











Comment: The recent years radical growth in extreme downpours and floodings all over the world can in part be explained by the atmosphere increasingly being loaded with comet dust, restricting fair weather circulation: Which means that the localized atmospheric dust pockets both serve as potential cloud condensation nuclei as well as binds electrons causing more frequent discharge events.
For an illustrated look at of how our cosmic weather works, as well as what it has in store for us, see Pierre Lescaudron's: Earth Changes and the Human-Cosmic Connection.