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Tue, 02 Nov 2021
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Tornado2

First ever February tornado hits Massachusetts

EF1 tornado was confirmed in Goshen & Conway MA map
© NWS Boston
A tornado, packing winds of up to 110 miles per hour, has slammed into the tiny town of Conway, Massachusetts - the first ever in the state. The twister was so powerful it cut a 5-mile path, ripped roofs off houses, and left at least one person injured.

"This was a highly unusual occurrence. In fact, there has never been a tornado during the month of February since official tornado statistics have been kept, dating back to 1950," the National Weather Service (NWS) stated, confirming the EF-1 tornado hit the town of Conway on Saturday, with a brief touchdown in Goshen.

Comment: Last month the US experienced the deadliest tornado outbreak since 1969 exceeding the entire 2016 death toll in just two days.


Attention

Dead Humpback whale found in river near Fairfield Township, New Jersey

A humpback whale which had been seen in the Delaware Bay has been found dead in the Cohansey River in Cumberland County. The whale is seen along the river shoreline Saturday, Feb. 25, 2017.
© Ed Hymer
A humpback whale which had been seen in the Delaware Bay has been found dead in the Cohansey River in Cumberland County. The whale is seen along the river shoreline Saturday, Feb. 25, 2017
A humpback whale has been found dead along the shoreline of the Cohansey River in Cumberland County.

The whale is the same injured one that was seen about three weeks ago in the Delaware Bay but then disappeared, according to Bob Schoelkopf, founding director of the Marine Mammal Stranding Center based in Brigantine.

According to Schoelkopf, the Stranding Center received a call from PSEG Nuclear that a whale was seen "rolling around," in front of the cooling water intakes at its Artificial Island nuclear generating station

Schoelkopf said it was "very unusual" to see a humpback whale in the waters near Artificial Island. He said the whale appeared to be acting strangely.

Attention

Mass extinction: Vatican embraces science to battle immense threats to humanity

Vatican
© Stefano Rellandini / Reuters
A general view of Saint Peter's Square, Vatican.
One in five species already face extinction on our planet, population growth projections are bewildering and climate change shows few, if any, signs of abating. Now, a group of experts are meeting to tackle the problem in the unlikeliest of venues.

Leading biologists, ecologists and economists from around the world have been invited to a conference in the Vatican this week, where the impending mass extinction event facing our planet will be addressed and possible solutions formulated.

"By the beginning of the next century we face the prospect of losing half our wildlife... The extinctions we face pose an even greater threat to civilization than climate change - for the simple reason they are irreversible," biology Professor Peter Raven, of the Missouri Botanical Garden told the Observer.

"That the symposia are being held at the Papal Academy is also symbolic. It shows that the ancient hostility between science and the church, at least on the issue of preserving Earth's services, has been quelled," said economist Sir Partha Dasgupta, of Cambridge University.

Comment: To understand what's going on, check out our book explaining how all these events are part of a natural climate shift, and why it's taking place now: Earth Changes and the Human-Cosmic Connection.


Cloud Precipitation

3 dead, 19 missing following floods and landslides in North and Central Chile

Flooding along the Maipo River in San Alfonso.
© Office of the Governor, Metropolitan Region
Flooding along the Maipo River in San Alfonso.
At least 3 people have died and 19 others are missing after heavy rains struck in central and northern Chile over the weekend. The heavy rains, unusual for this time of year in Chile, caused flooding and mudslides, blocking roads and leaving communities isolated.

The heavy rains also caused problems for the urban water systems in the Metropolitan region including the country's capital, Santiago. Increased turbidity in the Maipo River prompted water company Aguas Andinas to cut water supply from early 26 February, affecting around 1,440,000 people in 33 communes of the Metropolitan region. Businesses and schools have been closed as a result of lack of water supply.

Authorities declared a Red Alert for the Province of Santiago and the communes of San Bernardo and Puente Alto for the interruption of supply of drinking water, effective from 26 February 2017. With the Red Alert statement, all necessary and available resources will be mobilized to act and control the situation, given the extent and severity of the event.


Question

At least 150 peacocks reportedly die of contagious disease over 4 weeks in Thar, Pakistan

The neck of the birds get swollen after contracting the infection, after which they suddenly fall on the ground.
© Hanif Samoon
The neck of the birds get swollen after contracting the infection, after which they suddenly fall on the ground.
At least 150 peacocks have succumbed to a disease during the last four weeks in the Thar region of Sindh, with reportedly 12 more peacocks dying on Sunday in the Nagarparkar and Mithi tehsils of Tharparkar district.

The sudden spike in deaths of the birds have sparked doubt and fear among local experts as well as natives who say this might be an onset of the Newcastle disease, locally known as Ranikhet, a contagious avian disease.

Abdul Majeed Junejo, chairman of Joru union council near Mithi, told the local journalists that during past couple of weeks, more than 30 peafowls have died of disease.

"The neck of the birds swell up after contracting the infection, after which they eventually collapse and die," Junejo added, saying there are plenty of birds who are ailing and are in a need of treatement.

Cloud Precipitation

Yet another dam collapse imminent warning, North Philippines coldest in 46 years, summer snow in Australia

Summer snow!

Summer snow!
Another dam warning of imminent collapse with flash flood warnings in Nevada, the event has passes but with levies breaking across California, Nevada and now dam over tops in these two states, what is happening that's not being told to us. Summer snow in Australia, more images emerge, 24 feet of snow for Tahoe in JANUARY ALONE. Avalanches at Snowbird, people trapped.


Sources

SOTT Logo Media

SOTT Earth Changes Summary - January 2017: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs

January 2017 Summary snow italy
© Sott.net
At this point in our wild weather chronicles, we're starting to sound like a broken record. But it's not our fault! The climate just keeps on swinging from extreme to extreme...

Last month's highlights include:
  • Record wildfires in Chile and Argentina (where there was also record rainfall)
  • Record rainfall ending record drought in California
  • Record one-day and monthly snowfalls in Japan and the US West
  • Record tornado outbreaks in the US South
  • Record one-day rainfalls in the US South
  • Record-cold temperatures and snowfalls in eastern and southern Europe
  • Record snowfall in the Sahara
  • Record heat in Australia, and record cold in New Zealand
These were just some of the 'signs' of environmental upheaval around the world in January 2017:


Igloo

Heavy snow and blizzards hit Kazakhstan; residents forced to dig tunnels to escape buried houses (VIDEO)

Kazakhstan blizzard
© YouTube/Андрей Щетинин (screen capture)
The rooftops of houses are barely visible following blizzards in Kazakhstan this month.
Heavy snowfall and blizzards have affected regions of Kazakhstan. Although some blizzard conditions were predicted by Kazhydromet (National Hydrometeorological Service of the Republic of Kazakhstan) such was the accumulation of snowfall in the area around Prīrechnoe, residents had to resort to digging tunnels to escape from their homes.


Attention

11-tonne sperm whale washes up dead on beach in Carnsore, Ireland

Sperm whale

Sperm whale
An 11-tonne whale has been found dead washed up on a rocky beach at Carnsore.

Davie Rea, from Our Lady's Island, said the dead whale appeared to be in reasonable condition apart from the battering it had taken coming in over the rocks.

'I couldn't believe it when I saw it,' said Davie, who daily walks the shoreline between Nethertown and Carnsore Point.

Kevin MacCormick, from the Irish Whale and Dolphin Group, said the dead whale was a sperm whale that weighed around 11 tonnes.

dead whale

Blue Planet

Upcoming Vatican conference to address species extinction

rhinos
© Georgina Goodwin/Barcroft Media
One in five species now face extinction, but that figure could rise to as many as half within 80 years.
One in five species on Earth now faces extinction, and that will rise to 50% by the end of the century unless urgent action is taken. That is the stark view of the world's leading biologists, ecologists and economists who will gather on Monday to determine the social and economic changes needed to save the planet's biosphere.

"The living fabric of the world is slipping through our fingers without our showing much sign of caring," say the organisers of the Biological Extinction conference held at the Vatican this week.

Threatened creatures such as the tiger or rhino may make occasional headlines, but little attention is paid to the eradication of most other life forms, they argue. But as the conference will hear, these animals and plants provide us with our food and medicine. They purify our water and air while also absorbing carbon emissions from our cars and factories, regenerating soil, and providing us with aesthetic inspiration.

"Rich western countries are now siphoning up the planet's resources and destroying its ecosystems at an unprecedented rate," said biologist Paul Ehrlich, of Stanford University in California. "We want to build highways across the Serengeti to get more rare earth minerals for our cellphones. We grab all the fish from the sea, wreck the coral reefs and put carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. We have triggered a major extinction event. The question is: how do we stop it?"

Comment: One suspects that Ehrlich couldn't be happier if billions of humans simply vanished. This author of the Population Bomb has been scaremongering about global warming and overpopulation for years.