Earth ChangesS


Cloud Lightning

10 killed by lightning strikes in separate incidents in Andhra Pradesh, India

lightning
As many as 10 people have been killed in lightning strikes in three districts of Andhra Pradesh, the State Disaster Management Authority said here on Friday.

In a release, the SDMA said seven people were killed in lightning strikes in five mandals of SPS Nellore district, two in Guntur and one in Prakasam district on Thursday.

At Chennur village alone under Dagadarthi mandal in SPS Nellore district, three were killed in the incident.

"We had issued advance warnings with the likely location of the lightning and asked people to stay in safe places. But still the deaths occurred," the SDMA said.

Attention

Thousands of migratory birds killed by strong winds over Europe

Swallows
Swallows
Bird watchers across the world have brought to notice a natural catastrophe.

Thousands of birds like swallows and swifts that were migrating to Europe from Africa as part of their yearly cycles have been killed by high winds that have taken over Greece.

Hundreds of birds were found in Athens' streets, with many residents reporting finding corpses in their balconies. Further up, dead birds were found in the Aegean islands and in a lake located close to the port of Nauplia in the Peloponnese.


"It's a major disaster," Maria Ganoti of the wildlife protection group Anima told AFP on Thursday.

Attention

Indonesia's most active volcano erupts again, flight warning issued

Mount Merapi
Mount Merapi
Mount Merapi, the most active volcano in Indonesia, erupted again on Friday, spewing a column of ashes by up to 3,000 meters high, the Indonesian Volcanology Agency said.

The 2,930-meter volcano situated in Indonesia's main Java Island has spewed ashes for 13 times since September, indicating that the intrusion of new magma has been occurring, the agency said.

Residents living around the slopes are asked to take precautionary measures for possible rains of ashes, it said in a statement.

A no-go zone has been declared at a 3-km radius from the crater, it said.


Attention

Signs and Portents: Two-headed goat named 'Janus' born on Wisconsin farm

The goat was born last Sunday, and is one of about 1,000 goats born on the farm this year. His name is 'Janus,' named after the ancient Roman god who also had two faces.
The goat was born last Sunday, and is one of about 1,000 goats born on the farm this year. His name is 'Janus,' named after the ancient Roman god who also had two faces.
Neuske Farms in the western part of the state just welcomed a new and unique member to their family - a two-headed goat.

The goat was born last Sunday, and is one of about 1,000 goats born on the farm this year. His name is 'Janus,' named after the ancient Roman god who also had two faces.

The Neuske family says they want to keep the goat as a pet, and they hope he survive.


Tornado2

Severe storms with hail and tornadoes hit parts of Midwest and South US

Harrisburg tornado
© YouTube/ Live Storms Media (screen capture)
A line of severe storms with possible tornadoes caused damage overnight in parts of the Midwest and the South.

Tens of thousands of homes and businesses remained without electricity Thursday morning, according to poweroutage.us.

More than 30 homes were damaged or destroyed by an EF2 tornado in Harrisburg in northwest Arkansas, KAIT reported.

Poinsett County Sheriff Kevin Molder told the TV station at least two people were injured in the storm, which struck about 7 p.m. Wednesday CDT.


SOTT Logo

SOTT Focus: SOTT Earth Changes Summary - March 2020: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs

secsm2020
The incredible lockdown for this coronavirus "pandemic" has grabbed the world's attention, but in the meantime Mother Nature invites us to take note of some serious extreme weather events in March. Deluges, floods, landslides, and extraordinary cold and snowfall caused widespread devastation around the world last month, destroying crops and livestock on every continent.

At least 17 tornadoes hit Central US during a severe weather outbreak in March, leaving a massive trail of destruction. Nashville, Tennessee was heavily affected this month as a huge tornado cut a path through downtown, killing 25 people, destroying buildings, toppling electrical lines, and littering streets with debris.

Also last month, an earthquake rocked Croatia's capital Zagreb - the strongest quake to hit that city in 140 years - damaging buildings and leaving cars crushed by falling chunks of masonry. In Russia's Far East region, a 7.2-magnitude quake struck off the Kuril Islands and set off a minor tsunami.

The skies, as always these days, are heavy with meteor traffic. The media didn't report it as such, but based on eyewitness statements and analysis made by local experts, we suspect that a meteor IMPACTED the planet last month, carving out a major 68 feet-wide crater in the middle of a road in the Nigerian city of Akure.

All this and more in this month's SOTT Earth Changes Summary:


Snowflake

Fresh spring snowfall in Himachal Pradesh, India

snow

Intense cold wave conditions continued in Himachal Pradesh on April 08. Koksar area received fresh snowfall in the higher reaches.


Snowflake

3 record snowfalls in 6 days for Thompson, Manitoba, Canada

All city snow-clearing equipment,
© Ian GrahamAll city snow-clearing equipment, including two plow trucks last used to clear snow after the March 2017 blizzard, has been pressed into action since April 3, the second day of a six-day span that saw 65.6 centimetres of snow fall, with three of those days setting daily snowfall records.
An unprecedented six-day stretch of early April snowfall in Thompson has led to the biggest snow-clearing effort since the blizzard of March 2017 and, with everyone's nerves already frayed as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, harsh words from the city's mayor for citizens "whining" about the state of city roads.

Snow fell in Thompson four of the six days from April 2 to April 7, setting records on three of them. The 15.6 centimetres that fell last Thursday was the most since 6.8 cm of snow in 1995, while the 34.4 cm that fell on Friday beat the previous record of 6.4 cm from 1967 by 28 cm. Only 2.8 cm fell April 4, well below the 1973 record of 8.4 cm, while the 12.8 cm of snow on April 7 was close to double the previous record of 6.5 cm in 1981.

Snowflake

Snow falls in Dushanbe,Tajikistan in April - first time in 26 years

snow
The snow has fallen in Dushanbe in April for the first time during the past 26 years, Asia-Plus reported.

The snow is 18-20 cm thick in different parts of the capital city.

Snow is rare for Tajikistan in mid-spring. The country almost did not have snow during the past winter.



Cloud Precipitation

Extreme rainfall days in metropolitan Sao Paulo have risen four-fold in seven decades

Cemaden operators in the situation room
© CemadenCemaden operators in the situation room.
Extreme rainfall has become increasingly common in metropolitan São Paulo, Brazil. The capital of the state of São Paulo is the largest city in the southern hemisphere. The metropolitan area suffered from flooding due to heavy rain in February. Early in the month, no less than 114 millimeters (mm) fell in a single 24-hour period. This was the second highest 24-hour amount for the month since 1943, according to Brazil's National Meteorological Institute (INMET).

According to a study by researchers at the Natural Disaster Surveillance and Early Warning Center (CEMADEN), an agency of the Brazilian Ministry of Science, Technology, Innovation and Communications (MCTIC), both the total rainfall and the frequency of extreme rainfall events in metropolitan São Paulo have increased significantly in the last seven decades.

While there were practically no days with heavy rain (more than 50 mm) in the 1950s, such days have occurred between twice and five times per year in the last ten years in metropolitan São Paulo, according to the authors.

The study was supported by São Paulo Research Foundation — FAPESP under the aegis of its Research Program on Global Climate Change (RPGCC). The findings are reported in the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

Researchers affiliated with INMET, the National Space Research Institute (INPE) and the University of São Paulo's Institute of Astronomy, Geophysics and Atmospheric Sciences (IAG-USP) also took part in the study.

"Intense rainstorms lasting a few hours with huge amounts of water, as much as 80 mm or 100 mm, are no longer sporadic events. They're happening more and more frequently," José Antonio Marengo, a senior researcher at CEMADEN and principal investigator for the study, told.

Comment: At least 18 people killed by floods and landslides after 11 inches of rain in 12 hours in São Paulo state, Brazil