Earth Changes
Artvin, another Black Sea province on Turkey, has also been faced with floods and landslides as a result of heavy rainfall.
One week has passed in Güneysu
On July 14, Büyükköy town in Rize's Çayeli district, its Güneysu district and Muradiye town in city center were flooded due to rainfall.
As reported by the state-run Anadolu Agency (AA), Ardeşen and Fındıklı were especially affected by the rainfall last evening (July 21).
The mass flow rate of the Arılı Stream in Fındıklı increased due to the heavy rainfall. While the rain has caused some small-scale landslides in Tunca town of Ardeşen, the Dereağızı Community Facilities of Tunca Municipality have been flooded. The mass flow rate of the stream flowing through the açkar village of Areşen district has also increased as a result of the rain.
The regional emergency services headquarters in Yakutia, a Far Eastern region larger in size than countries like Argentina or Mexico, said on Wednesday that they were doing everything possible to tackle the blazes from the air.
"For almost a month, 800 rescuers equipped with parachutes... have been providing assistance in extinguishing the fires," officials said.
Comment: So-called "global warming" as a manmade problem is not, is not supported by the real data from the ground. Other planets in our solar system are also heating up. It is a natural cycle and humans can't influence it much. But they are right about one thing.
The Earth is warming from inside, and the upper atmosphere is rapidly cooling. At the same time, earth rotation is slowing down which means that the Earth's magnetic field is weakening. All these conditions are causing a lot of extreme weather conditions all around the world.
See also:
- Earth's Upper Atmosphere Cooling Dramatically
- New NASA study: Satellites see cooling in the upper atmosphere
- Global Warming Detected on Neptune's Largest Moon
- Earth's rotation is slowing - and scientists say it 'could' cause major earthquakes (uhm, it already is)
- Earth's Magnetic Field Is Fading
- Rising global temperatures on Mars melt hints at solar-system-wide, not human, cause for warming
- Natural Cycle Linked to Past and Present Global Warming Cycles: Earth Now Entering Global Cooling for the Next 180 Years
- Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Earth's thermosphere record cold & auroras with no CME
- Globe may be cooling on Global Warming
- Ocean oscillations are not "masking" global warming: the cooling is real
- The Suspicious Science Behind Man-Made Global Warming
- Earth is warming, but are we to blame?
- Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: The world is warming twice as fast as the world
- Global warming heating Mars four times faster than Earth
- Data doesn't support global warming theory
- State spreads silver iodide in wilderness
Virginia Acosta, 64, chapel assistant, and Samuel Cruz, 42, and both residents of the said place were rushed to Tuao District Hospital where they were eventually pronounced dead.
The police said the victims, who were securing their carabaos in front of the convent, decided take shelter at the said rest house during a heavy downpour.
However, Rogie Perez, 21, was sitting at the convent at that time when he heard a loud lightning burst.
Perez, who stays inside the convent later on saw the two victims badly injured due to the incident.

The AirNow fire and smoke map shows a film of gray wildfire smoke across most of the US on July 20, 2021.
I've been noticing strange sunsets lately in New Mexico where the sun looks like a molten ball of red as it sinks into the west. It's one symptom of wildfire smoke in the sky and a sign of another brutal wildfire season in the US.
The National Weather Service office in Aberdeen, South Dakota, tweeted on Tuesday: "You've probably noticed the persistent hazy skies as of late. Turns out we're not the only ones seeing this -- smoke from wildfires is covering much of the lower 48."
Besides apocalyptic-looking sunsets and orange skies, wildfire smoke can impact air quality far from where a fire is actually located. The wildfires, many of which are burning in the western US, have been fed by severe drought conditions and heat waves. These events have been exacerbated by the climate crisis and the extreme weather it brings with it.
The National Weather Service shared a fire and smoke map from the AirNow air quality monitoring site. What's notable are the wide swaths of gray indicating smoke coverage over the US and Canada, as well as the many marked wildfire locations, denoted by the orange fire icons.
A number of city streets were flooded. As noted, the Genoese, French Boulevard and Deribasovskaya, the central alley of Arcadia, turned into flooded rivers.
There is no light in a number of districts of the city. Dozens of trees fell.
Gundri Devi (50) was attacked by the leopard while working in a field, forest ranger Devendra Singh Pundir said.
The woman''s body bearing deep wounds on the neck was found a few hours later in a gorge, he said.
This is the second leopard attack casualty in the village in just three days.
The big cat had lifted a woman from her courtyard last Saturday and left her half-eaten body in the fields.
The incident took place on Tuesday evening in the forest near Bagoha village, said the reserve's field director Uttam Kumar Sharma.
The deceased, resident of the same village, had ventured into the forest in search of his buffalo.
While his family suspected that a tiger could have killed him, Sharma said a bear was found to be roaming in the area when the incident took place and inspection of the spot also indicated attack by a bear.
Around 2:50 p.m., the Grand Canyon Communications Center received a call that multiple people were struck by lightning at the Bright Angel Trailhead during a monsoonal thunderstorm, according to a press release.
Upon arrival, officials found a 30-year-old male and a 28-year-old female unresponsive. The woman received life-saving measures before regaining a pulse. The male regained consciousness without assistance, officials said.
Both victims were taken to the Flagstaff Medical Center as storm activity prevented air transport, officials said.
It was just before 9 a.m. when the waterspout formed. Video from driver Chris Watson showed the funnel just south of Interstate 275 on the Tampa side of the span.
"That thing is huge! Hope I get across this bridge," Watson can be heard chuckling in video shared with FOX 13.
No damage was reported after the funnel was sighted, and no warnings were issued.














Comment: Check out our floods section for more flooding events which seem to be occurring more frequently around the world these days.