Earth Changes
Friday, December 23, 2011 at 12:02:06 UTC
Friday, December 23, 2011 at 05:02:06 PM at epicenter
Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones
Location:
28.933°N, 68.332°E
Depth:
34 km (21.1 miles)
Region:
PAKISTAN
Distances:
72 km (44 miles) N of Jacobabad, Pakistan
146 km (90 miles) NNW of Sukkur, Pakistan
170 km (105 miles) E of Kalat, Pakistan
698 km (433 miles) SW of ISLAMABAD, Pakistan
Initial reports said one person was injured at a city mall and was taken to a hospital, and four people had to be rescued after being trapped by a rock fall. But there were no immediate reports of serious injuries or widespread damage in the city, which is still recovering from a devastating February earthquake that killed 182 people and destroyed much of the downtown area.

Dust rises from rocks falling from a cliff in the Christchurch suburb of Sumner moments after the earthquake struck.
Updated: USGS aftershock data here

What is this creepy cloud hovering over England? This sky formation was reportedly photographed on Thursday, Dec. 22.
"As an air mass blows across a mountain range at perpendicular angle to the range, it creates a standing wave, much like a river running over an underwater rock have standing waves. As the air rises, the temperature decreases and the moisture saturates the air to create the standing lenticular cloud. It gets it shape as a cigar, because air descends rapidly on the other side when it loses temperature again (loss of thermal energy in the formation of droplets). So it re-enforces the strength of the wave, making it exponentially stronger rather than weaker (like in a river). Thus you can often see lenticular clouds in formation, up to tens of miles downwind of the mountain range," replied one verbose user.
Fishermen report the eruption occurred near Saba, one of the Al-Zubair archipelago's small islands, located about 35 miles west of Yemen's port of As-Salif.
Lava was said to be spewing 65 to 100 feet into the air. The fishermen said they had never seen an eruption in that area before.

Rescuers on Wednesday pulled a Texas family from an SUV that had been buried in a snowdrift on a rural New Mexico highway for nearly two days. State police said rescuers had to dig through 4 feet of ice and snow to free the Higgins family, whose red GMC Yukon got stuck on U.S. 56 near Springer when a blizzard moved through the area Monday.
State police said rescuers had to dig through 4 feet of ice and snow to free the Higgins family, whose red GMC Yukon got stuck on U.S. 56 near Springer when a blizzard moved through the area Monday.
Rescuers found David and Yvonne Higgins and their 5-year-old daughter Hannah clinging to each other and lethargic early Wednesday morning. The family is recovering at Miners Colfax Medical Center in Raton.
David Higgins told The Associated Press he and his wife both have pneumonia but his daughter is fine. He said he was glad to be able to talk about his ordeal because he had feared that he and his family might not be found.
Winds knocked over a big rig early Thursday in San Bernardino County below the Cajon Pass, NBCLosAngeles.com reported. No injuries were reported.
While this week's winds could be a serious hazard, they weren't forecast to approach the magnitude of a storm on Nov. 30 that spawned gusts approaching 100 mph. In that storm, trees were toppled, power poles snapped, homes were damaged and electricity was cut to nearly 650,000 homes and businesses.
This time around, northeast winds could reach 65 mph in many mountain areas and 40 mph in the valleys, the National Weather Service warned.
High-wind warnings were in effect from 1 a.m. PT Thursday to 1 p.m. PT Friday in Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties, it said.
Isolated gusts greater than 70 mph were possible below the Cajon and Banning passes in the Santa Ana Mountains, the weather service added.
"The winds will make driving difficult, especially for motorists with high profile vehicles. ... Watch for broken tree limbs and downed power lines," it said.
Southern California Edison on Wednesday night alerted customers to take precautions because of powerful winds that are expected to blow across Southern California, the LA Times reported.
In the Pasadena area, one of the hardest hit by the November storm, crews are still clearing debris. "Work crews are working in 12-hour shifts," said city spokeswoman Ann Erdman. "They continue, night and day, to get the debris picked up. ... We have a ways to go."
A "culture of cover up" and inadequate cleanup efforts have combined to leave Japanese people exposed to "unconscionable" health risks nine months after last year's meltdown of nuclear reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi power plant, health experts say. Although the Japanese government has declared the plant virtually stable, some experts are calling for evacuation of people from a wider area, which they say is contaminated with radioactive fallout.
They're also calling for the Japanese government to reinstate internationally-approved radiation exposure limits for members of the public and are slagging government officials for "extreme lack of transparent, timely and comprehensive communication."
But temperatures inside the Fukushima power station's three melted cores have achieved a "cold shutdown condition," while the release of radioactive materials is "under control," according to the International Atomic Energy Agency. That means government may soon allow some of the more than 100,000 evacuees from the area around the plant to return to their homes. They were evacuated from the region after it was struck with an 8.9magnitude earthquake and a tsunami last March 11.

The crippled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power station is seen through a bus window in Okuma on November 12, 2011.
Nuclear crisis minister Goshi Hosono suggested that the timetable was ambitious, acknowledging that decommissioning three reactors with severely melted fuel plus spent fuel rods at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant was an "unprecedented project," and that the process was not "totally foreseeable."
"But we must do it even though we may face difficulties along the way," Hosono told a news conference.
Under a detailed roadmap approved earlier Wednesday following consultation with experts and nuclear regulators, plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Co. will start removing spent fuel rods within two to three years from their pools located on the top floor of each of their reactor buildings.
The influenza virus, known as H3N8, appears to have a low risk for transmission to humans, they said. But officials are urging the public to be cautious about approaching stranded seals to reduce the potential risk of spreading the infection to people or their unleashed dogs.
"Influenza that poses a risk to people are human strains of influenza. . . . but there have been documented cases in people of transmission from other species,'' said Dr. Catherine M. Brown, public health veterinarian for the Massachusetts Department of Public Health.
Other viruses that caused global disease outbreaks in years past, such as avian and swine flu, jumped from birds and pigs to humans, usually through the animals' caretakers, Brown said. She said there has been an increasing number of instances in the past decade of flu viruses jumping from one species to another.

The tsunami triggered by the magnitude 9.0 earthquake that struck Japan in March devastated coastal areas. This photo of the town of Onagawa as taken April 8, 2011. The Pacific Northwest sits atop a fault zone much like the one that ruptured the sea floor off Japan, killing thousands.
A somewhat reassuring new study suggests otherwise.
University of California researchers examined the timing of earthquakes worldwide from 1900 and found no evidence of a domino effect in which one great earthquake triggers others on distant continents. It could be random chance.
"We don't want people to assume that our conclusion means the ongoing risk is small," says study co-author Peter Shearer, a professor of geophysics at the University of California San Diego. "There is a significant risk of big earthquakes in all subduction zones." It's just that the run of very large earthquakes most likely does nothing to change the risk in distant locations, Shearer says.









