Earth Changes
Numerous people living on the west side of Hamilton reported hearing a loud boom around 5:40 p.m. Sunday. Some say it even shook their homes and knocked items off their walls.
"No other way to explain it other than a loud boom," Darryl Pies said. "It was different than firecrackers or perhaps a transformer blowing up. I mean,it was 'boom,' and a little bit of a rumble after that."
Earl Caudill said he felt it. "I felt the concussion. You could feel the concussion from it," he said. "Of course, you come out to see if you could see smoke and stuff. There was no smoke out here."
Multiple people called 911 after hearing the noise. "It shook my mom's apartment. I mean, it was huge, and now all kinds of people are saying they felt it, so it was something," one caller said. Another caller said, "It was so bad that it blew a clock off my wall."

A large sinkhole appeared Sunday on East 27th Street in East Oakland.
The hole, about 25 feet wide, 25 feet long and 20 feet deep, opened about 9:21 a.m. in the 2600 block of East 27th Street in the lower Dimond district.
No one was in a parked 1991 BMW that was left partly submerged. It was later towed out.
On Monday, there were workers from the City of Oakland, PG&E and a private contractor at the scene. It was not known when the hole would be refilled and all repairs completed but crews were working around the clock to expedite the repairs, officials said..
Some underground sewer and storm drain lines were damaged as well as the roadway, officials said, but the extent of the damage or how many users were affected was not immediately available.
The discovery was made by a team from the University of Royal Holloway London using the world's largest array of seismic sensors that identified the carbon from vibrations generated in Earth's upper mantle.
The reservoir is believed to have been formed when a Pacific tectonic plate was forced underneath the western US, according to the research published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters.
"It is a result of one of the tectonic plates of the Pacific Ocean forced underneath the western US, undergoing partial melting, thanks to gasses like CO2 and H2O contained in the minerals dissolved in it," study author Dr Sash Hier-Majumder of Royal Holloway said in a statement.
Ross Smith was driving along a country road with his friends when they spotted a mysterious brown creature on the grass verge.
When the 20-year-old got out of the car and went to investigate, the animal turned nasty and, snarling, leapt at him.
The 3ft long beaver is believed to be one of a colony of the animals living wild in Lintrathen Loch, near Kirriemuir in Angus.
Extraordinary mobile phone camera footage of Mr Smith's encounter now been posted on the internet, prompting a leading academic to warn the public not to approach the furry rodents.
Although it is not clear what provoked the beaver to attack, one of his friends can be heard asking: 'Is that a platypus?'
Mr Smith, who works in a cafe in Edzell, captured the encounter on his mobile phone and shared it online.
Fortunately he was not hurt by the animal, which he estimated to be about a 3ft (1 metre) long and to weigh about 25-30kg (55-66lbs).
Victim Louise Hermida's autistic 39-year-old son, Daniel Ferraro, was also bitten by the bloodthirsty pet, named Boss, and suffered minor leg injuries.
The horrifying attack by the powerful mastiff-Great Dane mix happened just past midnight in the family's Long Island City home on 27th St., neighbors said.
Hermida was bitten in her upper torso and found at the bottom of the basement steps in her two-story townhouse, sources said.
Earlier today, WA Premier Colin Barnett said that the heavy rain has affected huge areas of the state, including Swan Valley, where it has had a dramatic impact on grape growers, as well as parts of the Kimberley, the Pilbara, the Gascoyne, Mid-West areas and the south coastal areas.
One man drowned while trying to drive his car onto a flooded road near Esperance in the south of the state on Saturday 11 February. WA Police said that "the body of a man, believed to be a missing 68 year old man of Esperance, was sadly located by Police and SES searchers in the Coramup Creek near Esperance this morning. The man was reported missing around 11.15pm on Saturday 11 February after he drove his vehicle onto Bluman Road, which at the time was flooded. Both he and his vehicle were tragically swept from the road."
After a weekend of record temperatures, the rain set in on Monday afternoon.
Temperatures dropped 14 degrees Celsius in two hours at Gatton, west of Brisbane, as the storm rolled in.
Storm chaser Thomas Hinterdorfer was at Toogoolawah, west of Brisbane, when the storm hit.
"Complete whiteout, absolute carnage," he said.
The State Emergency Service (SES) was called out to nearly 50 jobs around the south-east.
The SES dealt with a number of tree falls and damaged roofs, while 22,000 properties lost power at the height of the storm.
Rodney Thurtell, 50, was munching on a piece of barbecued chicken for breakfast and gazing out to sea from an elevated position near the surf life saving club when he noted a dark, thin line in the clouds, which stretched all the way to the surface of the ocean.
"I could see the water moving in the sea where it touched down," Rodney told the Guardian.
"I saw another bloke and he said 'what's that', and I said 'that's a water spout' and he agreed that's exactly what it was."
GOES WEST rainfall forecast mapsas well. Once you leave your homes you will not be allowed to return for weeks if at all until spring. Good Luck.
Sources
The first wave of the earthquakes was recorded on Feb. 6 at 6:51 a.m. in the province's Ayvacık district with a 5.3-magnitude temblor. That was followed by another one with the same magnitude at 13.58 p.m. on the same day, and the latest major quake occurred in Ayvacık on Feb. 12 with the same magnitude, according to AFAD.
A number of buildings in the region were damaged and many locals settled in tent cities set up near the village of Yukarıköy, which was severely damaged by the quakes.
AFAD and the Turkish Red Crescent are currently setting up a container city for victims in the area.














Comment: The evening before, another loud boom was reported 180 miles away by residents of Mansfield, Ohio.