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Thu, 04 Nov 2021
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Red Flag

The oceans are drowning in plastic - is anyone paying attention?

plastic
© DIMITAR DILKOFF
Discarded plastic bottles and other garbage blocks the Vacha Dam, near the Bulgarian town of Krichim, on April 25, 2009. Single-use plastic containers like bottles and plastic bags are “the biggest source of trash” found near waterways and beaches, according to the nonprofit Ocean Conservancy.
Imagine an area 34 times the size of Manhattan. Now imagine it covered ankle-deep in plastic waste — piles of soda bottles and plastic bags, takeout containers by the mile, drinking straws as far as the eye can see.

That's a total of about 19 billion pounds of garbage. And according to one of the best estimates available, that's how much plastic waste ends up in our oceans every year.

"We're being overwhelmed by our waste," said Jenna Jambeck, an environmental engineer who led the 2015 study that determined this staggering number. According to Jambeck's research, this figure is on track to double by 2025 unless something is done, swiftly and at a global scale, to stem the tide of garbage.

Comment: Most of us are simply unaware of how the oceans of the world are being trashed!


Ice Cube

Antarctic ice rift spreads

Larsen C
© Midas Project, A. Luckman, Swansea University
From SWANSEA UNIVERSITY and the "if ice cracked in the Antarctic before airplanes and satellites existed, did it make a visual?" department.

New branch revealed in latest data from ice shelf

The rift in the Larsen C ice shelf in Antarctica now has a second branch, which is moving in the direction of the ice front, Swansea University researchers revealed after studying the latest satellite data. The main rift in Larsen C, which is likely to lead to one of the largest icebergs ever recorded, is currently 180 km long. The new branch of the rift is 15 km long.

Last year, researchers from the UK's Project Midas, led by Swansea University, reported that the rift was growing fast. Now, just 20km of ice is keeping the 5,000 sq km piece from floating away.
Larsen C Ice Shelf
© John Sontag/NASA
Larsen C ice rift aerial view

Comment: Our planet is in constant alteration and flux. This rapid, significant and observable event is part of the bigger changes that are now upon us.


Seismograph

Shallow 4.4 magnitude earthquake hits near Mt. Hekla volcano, Iceland

graph
An earthquake of 4,4 magnitude hit South Iceland shortly after 12 noon today. Smaller quakes were also felt. The epicenter was about 30 kilometers west of the Mt. Hekla volcano and 4-7 kilometer under the earth's surface. The earthquake was felt in various parts of South Iceland including Selfoss and Hella.

According to the Icelandic Met Office the earthquakes are not related to Mt. Hekla and are not a sign that an eruption is imminent. No injuries or property damage has been reported.

Comment: A shallow earthquake of 5.8 magnitude was registered in the Scotia Sea (South Atlantic) on the same day.


Cloud Precipitation

Record precipitation levels threaten to trigger widespread flooding in Canada

Floods in Quebec, Canada
© CHRIS WATTIE/REUTERS
A man walks past an abandoned car on a flooded residential street in Gatineau, Quebec, Canada, May 4, 2017. Environment Canada has issued a special weather statement for much of Quebec.
Unrelenting rain is worsening rising water levels in Central Canada that have already forced Quebec to call in military aid.

The Quebec government says Canadian Forces personnel have been enlisted to help battle the floodwaters in that province, where the storm is most severe.

More than 130 communities there have been hit by flooding and some 700 people have abandoned their homes.

Environment Canada says a massive system is slowly drenching much of Ontario, the Maritimes and Quebec. Record precipitation levels — with double to triple the seasonal norms for rainfall — have threatened to trigger widespread flooding in those areas.

Rainfall advisories were lifted for Montreal and Toronto early Saturday.

However, elsewhere in Quebec, along the Gaspé Peninsula, Environment Canada warns up to an additional 100 millimetres could fall.


Cloud Precipitation

Increasing cosmic rays linked to historic USA floods & global deluges

US floods
© YouTube/Adapt 2030 (screen capture)
With historic floods sweeping our planet, the cause can be attributed directly to an increase in galactic cosmic rays. These cause cloud formation between 15,000 and 18,500 feet and there have been record increases in the last 18 months of 12.5% with another 19% increase forecast for solar cycle 25. This is the reason our planet is being ravaged by hail, blizzards and historic floods events, not CO2, but the answer is Galactic Cosmic Rays.


Comment: See these related articles for more information:


Cloud Grey

Stunning 'roll cloud' photographed in the skies above Cumbria, UK

The clearly defined narrow cloud is believed to be cause by the Helm wind - a result of the geograph of the fells - and was seen by thousands of people as it drifted over Cumbria

The clearly defined narrow cloud is believed to be cause by the Helm wind - a result of the geograph of the fells - and was seen by thousands of people as it drifted over Cumbria
Onlookers were treated to a stunning spectacle as a strong wind created an unusual meteorological sight above their homes.

Known as Helm Bar, the 'roll cloud' formation stretched across the sky above Carlisle, Cumbria.

Extreme weather conditions which are unique to the highest point of the Pennines created the striking tube-shaped cloud.

The helm bar cloud formation is only said to end when the direction of the wind changes again.

Info

Hundreds of leopard sharks washing up dead on San Francisco beaches

leopard shark
© Matthew Field
For seven weeks now, hundreds upon hundreds of leopard shark corpses have been washing up on the beaches of San Francisco Bay, turning the City by the Bay into the "Dead Shark Capital of California."

A similar incident occurred in 2011, when the beautiful beaches of San Francisco Bay were choked with the fetid corpses of leopard sharks. Similar die-offs have been reported going back to 1967.

"I look at it as a 50-year-old shark murder mystery, and we are hopefully closing in on the killer," said California Department of Fish and Wildlife senior fish pathologist Mark Okihiro to Bay Nature, a California conservation group.

Wolf

Investigation into woman's death after dog attack in Buncombe County, North Carolina

Dog attack
The Buncombe County Sheriff's Office was investigating after a woman was found dead in her home Monday along with an aggressive dog, according to an agency spokeswoman.

The Sheriff's Office identified the woman as 59-year-old Jane Marie Egle, who lived in a home near the Bent Creek Forest.

Egle had visible cuts on her body that are consistent with an animal attack, but her exact cause of death had not been determined by Friday, said Natalie Bailey, spokeswoman for the Sheriff's Office.

The county's Animal Services Division responded to the residence around 5:20 p.m. Monday after receiving a call for assistance.

When deputies arrived, Egle was lying on the floor unresponsive inside her home, Bailey said. An aggressive dog, a South African Boerboel, was also in the home and would not allow anyone inside.

Cloud Lightning

Lightning strikes kill 3 people in Bangladesh

LIGHTNING
Three people, including a farmer, were killed in lightning strikes in Jessore and Gopalganj districts on Friday, reports UNB.

In Jessore, two people and a cow were killed at Nishchintpur village of Jhikargachha upazila after being struck by a thunderbolt.

The deceased are Yunus Ali, 25, son of Akbar Ali, and Jasimuddin, son of Tajuddin.

Masud Karim, officer-in-charge of Jhikargachha police station, said the lightning struck them while they were going to a field in the morning.

Arrow Up

Guatemala's Fuego volcano erupts belching ash up to 37,000 feet

Fuego volcano eruption
© AFP PHOTO / JOHAN ORDONEZ / MANILA BULLETIN
The Fuego volcano is seen from Alotenango municipality, Sacatepequez department, about 30 km southwest of Guatemala City, as it erupts on May 5, 2017.
Guatemala's Fuego volcano belched black ash high into the sky at dawn on Friday, May 5th, with authorities placing local authorities from nearby villages on high alert.

Guatemala's volcanic monitor, Insivumeh, said in a statement that thick columns of ash reached between 34,000 feet and 37,000 feet above sea level, amid loud explosions and extended new lava flows.

According to Insivumeh's statement, ash was swept more than 12 miles towards the south, southwest and west and fell in the areas of San Pedro Yepocapa, Sangre de Cristo, Panimache I and II.

Local media reported that the National Coordinator for Disaster Reduction (Conred) has not yet reported damages after the explosion, which is the fourth so far this year.

The volcano is located about 30 miles southwest of the Guatemalan capital.