Earth Changes
In some areas, this will be the second storm in less than a week to unleash a blizzard and over a foot of snow.
Behind a weak system that returned snow to New England to start the weekend, a second and more potent storm will follow late on Sunday into Monday.
"The storm has the potential to bring 1 to 2 feet (30 to 60 cm) of snow to parts of central and northern New England and parts of the Maritime Provinces of Canada," AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Alex Sosnowski said.
Locally higher amounts can occur in parts of central and eastern Maine, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.
There will be a sharp variation in snowfall across northern and southern New England, where a distance of a few dozen miles could mean the difference between a slushy inch or two of snow and well over half a foot.
Justin Matthews said in a post on Facebook, the eagle was rescued by a man named David - a man currently undergoing chemotherapy treatments - from water in the Copper Stone subdivision.
Matthews said David saw an alligator with the eagle in its jaws, so he waded into the water and pulled the eagle away.
David told Matthews he "couldn't watch America's symbol die."
The bird apparently has a nest nearby, as well as a mate.The nest, according to Matthews, is on a cell phone tower in Parrish, close to Harrison Ranch.
The injured eagle was taken to Save Our Seabirds in Sarasota, but unfortunately had to be euthanized shortly afterward.
The deep sea fish usually lives at depths of around 1000 meters and is the longest known living species of bony fish in the world.
Robinson said she was camping at Totaranui Campground in Abel Tasman National Park with her husband Nigel Robinson and a group of 12 friends and children.
The group had just come back from lunch at Awaroa on Thursday when they decided to go for a walk along nearby Waiharakeke Beach as it was low tide.
"We saw something shiny on the edge of the water and thought it was a piece of a boat and walked up and there it was.
"I've never seen anything like it. It looked like a huge lure, it was pretty spectacular."
Robinson said the oarfish was "too big" to try and carry back to the campground, so instead they went to the Department of Conservation office early the next morning to report their find.
Oarfish can reach a length of 17 meters and can weigh up to 270 kilograms.
The oarfish that washed up on the beach on Thursday was about three meters long and was "really heavy".
On Wednesday, a 10-foot-long dead oarfish was caught by fishermen off the coast of Agusan del Norte.
To some, deep-sea creatures such as oarfish that end up in shallow water are a good predictor of earthquakes. How true that is remains very much a debate?
"It's theoretically possible because when an earthquake occurs there can be a build-up of pressure in the rocks which can lead to electrostatic charges that cause electrically charged ions to be released into the water," Rachel Grant, a lecturer in animal biology, said in a report posted on the Independent news website in October 2013.
In an undated Japan Times article, seismologist Kiyoshi Wadatsumi said that "deep-sea fish living near the sea bottom are more sensitive to the movements of active faults than those near the surface of the sea."
Flooding at West Point Treatment Plant in Magnolia's Discovery Park caused damage that apparently fried an electrical circuit and triggered a system shutdown, a spokesman said.
That has caused the county to operate the facility much of Thursday in "emergency bypass mode" — dumping untreated effluent directly into Puget Sound.
Officials were still calculating how much untreated wastewater had flowed into Puget Sound. Doug Williams, a spokesman for the county's Department of Natural Resources and Parks, estimated more than 150 million to 200 million gallons, with that number likely to grow.
By Thursday night, Williams said the plant was partially back on line and was providing initial treatment to some of the water which had been flowing untreated into the Sound or diverted to other treatment plants.
The dumped sewage is a mix of about 90 percent stormwater and 10 percent wastewater, he said.
The county has managed to divert nearly 200 million gallons of sewage water headed for West Point to four other treatment facilities, Williams said.
Chris Wilke, executive director of Puget Soundkeeper, an environmental watchdog group, said the amount of untreated sewage dumped so far comprises about one-fifth of the typical overflow amount for the area's sewers annually.
CHP in Truckee and Gold Run posted the photos above and below to Facebook at 10 a.m. Friday, and announced the road closure.
The bite happened at a home in the East Moreland Trailer Park in Lincoln County..
Austin McClure, the toddler's father, said that doctors told him it was the worst dog bite injury they have seen on a child.
"Tore into his face and ripped his nose pretty much clean off his face. They said the dog was out to kill. It wasn't playing around."
The injured boy, named Trenton, received 50 stitches to his face. Doctors say he will have to stay at UK for at least a week for treatment.
McClure has a lot of questions surrounding what happened to his son. He says the toddler was in the care of his ex-girlfriend, the boy's mother, at the time of the attack.
The Lincoln County Sheriff's Office did open an investigation, but the sheriff says the county attorney advised him that a report was not needed since the county dog warden already did one. County Attorney Darryl Day said that no one has inquired about filing charges.
On Tuesday, near Elk Mountain on Interstate 80, three Wyoming state troopers were on scene providing care for motorists who were involved in wrecks.

The outlet pipe at the bottom of Anderson Dam, pictured Feb. 9, has been wide open since early January.
The Anderson Reservoir in Morgan Hill is just a couple of miles east of U.S. Highway 101.
The dam is especially vulnerable right now if an earthquake happens to strike.
Water gushes from the bottom of the Anderson Dam. The release valve is wide open and crowds are coming to see what looks like a water show.
Sean Barragan, of Morgan Hill, said, "It's pretty awesome. It's not a thing you see every day."
But it's not just for show.
The water district is trying to quickly lower the level of the reservoir, because it's not seismically safe to be as full as it is now.
A 2009 study found a large earthquake next to the dam could cause a failure.
Since then state regulators placed a cap on the dam at 68 percent of capacity.
But the recent rains have boosted the level to 91 percent of capacity.
Comment: State officials are also concerned with another California dam:
- Officials warn gaping hole in Oroville Dam spillway is growing
- Threats loom as California water levels rise, damage spillway at tallest US dam
In total, more than 650 of the animals have stranded themselves along a three-mile stretch of coastline at Farewell Spit in the past two days.
About 335 of the whales are dead, 220 remain stranded and 100 are back at sea.
Andrew Lamason, Department of Conservation Golden Bay operations manager, said he was sure the latest strandings were a new pod because all of the refloated whales from the previous group had been tagged.















Comment: See also: Symbolic? Bald eagle photographed with trap attached to its talons near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania