Earth ChangesS


Attention

Wild animal attacks in Nepal over 4 years show 230% increase in deaths, 300% in injuries

Charging elephant
© GettyCharging elephant
Number of people dying in wild animal attacks has increased by more than 75 per cent in fiscal 2018-19, compared to the total number of deaths recorded in fiscal 2017-18 across the country.

As many as 30 persons died in wildlife attacks in fiscal 2018-19, which is much higher compared to 17 human deaths in fiscal 2017-18. In 2016 -17, a total of 12 people had lost their lives in animal attacks and nine people died in animal attacks in 2015-16.

Data of the last four fiscals from 2015-16 to 2018 -19 showed that number of human deaths resulting from wildlife attacks had increased by more than 230 per cent.

Comment: Details of some of the attacks reported from the country over the past 4 years:
  • Peeved pachyderms: Elephant kills 3 people in as many days in Nepal
  • 14 killed in wild animal attacks in Chitwan National Park, Nepal in 2016/17; compared to 5 for previous year
  • Rampaging rhino kills man on street in southern Nepal
  • Elephant kills 2 and injures 5 in Nepal
  • Man-eating leopard kills for a second time within 2 weeks in Nepal; 24 such attacks in past 4 years
  • Rhino kills woman and injures eight in Nepal



  • Cloud Lightning

    Record-breaking? Lightning strike 'as long as Kansas' observed in Brazil

    Record spider lightning over Brazil
    © MICHAEL PETERSON, LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORYA thunderstorm looms over southern Brazil and Uruguay in this computer-rendered view. The lightning in this image is around 160 miles long, roughly a third the size of the newly reported record-breaking flash.

    The spidery streak is just one of many new lightning discoveries found in often overlooked satellite data


    ONE EVENING WHILE working, Michael Peterson found himself staring at an enormous spider. But Peterson, a remote sensing scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory, wasn't looking at a critter of the eight-legged variety. Instead the form crawling across his screen was a monstrous flash of so-called spider lightning — a twisting network of light stretching hundreds of miles across stormy skies.

    "I was just blown away," he says.

    His analysis revealed two record-breaking lightning flashes, the longest by length and by duration. One stretched over Brazil some 418 miles from tip to tail — slightly longer than Kansas is across. The second lit up skies for 13.5 seconds over the central United States. A third lightning flash over the southern United States sprawled some 44,400 square miles — nearly the area of Ohio. (Official data aren't kept for the flash with the largest area, so it's not possible to determine if it set a record.)

    The previous record-holding flashes "called into question our typical view of lightning," Peterson says. But these latest mega-flashes "are now essentially pushing the boundary further for what lightning can be."

    Comment: Earlier this month rare lightning strikes were detected near the North Pole. A couple of weeks ago record lightning strikes were reported in Iceland.

    In March this year an anomalous lightning storm hit Southern California producing more than 1,200 bursts in five minutes. In December 2018 the sky over New York City lit up with mysterious blue light.

    Could the base level electric charge in the atmosphere be changing? See also: Also check out SOTT radio's:


    Snowflake Cold

    Rare 'sudden stratospheric warming' event could bring icy weather to New Zealand

    ‘Sudden Stratospheric Warming’ event could bring icy weather to New Zealand
    © NIWANIWA says a ‘Sudden Stratospheric Warming’ event could bring icy weather to New Zealand next month.
    It's called a sudden stratospheric warming event - and, unlike the name might suggest, the rare phenomenon could spell a burst of bitterly cold weather for New Zealand over coming weeks.

    A sudden stratospheric warming (SSW) event kicks off when the temperature of the stratosphere - that's 30km to 50km above ground - over the South Pole climbs by more than 25C. Meteorologists think it's likely this is about to happen next week.

    Importantly, it has the potential to mess with a ring of stormy and freezing weather that encircles Antarctica, which is at its strongest at this time of year - and which we know better as the polar vortex that's been dubbed the "beast from the east" - threatening to send a series of cold blasts from the North Pole to Western Europe and the UK, along with the east coast of the United States.

    While this swirling, freezing air mass is usually effective at keeping harsh, wintry conditions locked up close to the pole, an SSW can help weaken or displace it in the stratosphere.

    This sends these cold masses filtering down on to the tropospheric polar vortex, potentially influencing our own weather patterns.

    Niwa meteorologist Ben Noll said that, during a major SSW, the winds in the stratosphere reversed from westerly to easterly.

    "For up to about a month after the SSW, polar air masses, known as streamers, can break off from the weakened vortex and move towards New Zealand," he said.

    "It doesn't guarantee unusual or extreme weather, but it can happen."

    Info

    Ice Age Farmer Report: ALERT - Farmer "threatens" USDA / Cannery shutdown - No crops to can

    floods
    The US Pro Farm Crop Tour was shut down after a farmer "threatened" USDA officials. Steelworkers laid off due to lower demand for cans -- BECAUSE THERE ARE NO CROPS TO CAN! Major shifts are happening EVERY DAY as we enter the difficult growing seasons of the Grand Solar Minimum.


    Sources

    Comment: Why there is 'shock and distrust' among US farmers


    Attention

    Boy mauled by kangaroo in New South Wales, Australia

    Lewis suffered puncture wounds and scratches to his head and torso.
    Lewis suffered puncture wounds and scratches to his head and torso.
    A father who jumped to the defence of his son as he was being mauled by a kangaroo has said the five year old has been left traumatised by the incident.

    Brenton Dyer was doing some work in the back of his Valla Beach home in New South Wales, south of Coffs Harbour, on Thursday when he saw the animal jumping at his five-year-old son Lewis.

    Lewis and his brother Jedd, 10, had been playing in the family's backyard.

    "I heard a bit of commotion and I just saw a kangaroo jumping and on top of my son," Dyer told 7NEWS.com.au.

    "I could just see him and a cloud of dust."

    Black Cat 2

    Mountain lion attacks deer hunter near Kremmling, Colorado

    mountain lion
    Mountain lion
    A man attacked by a mountain lion Saturday night near Kremmling did everything right when he fought back and stabbed the animal with a pocketknife, a spokesman for Colorado Parks and Wildlife said Friday.

    The man was reportedly attacked around 9 p.m. while scouting out places to hunt elk around the Big Horn Park subdivision northeast of Kremmling. Authorities and their hounds tracked down the mountain lion at about 7 a.m. the next morning and killed it.

    A necropsy revealed the mountain lion had only grass in his stomach, indicating the animal was hungry, said Mike Porras, a spokesman for Colorado Parks and Wildlife.

    Comment: In the same state later in the month: Boy attacked by mountain lion in Bailey, Colorado


    Attention

    Musician killed by grizzly bear on sound gathering trip in Northwest Territories, Canada

    bear
    A French artist traversing the Canadian wilderness to record nature sounds for a musical project was fatally mauled by a grizzly bear that surprised him in his sleep, according to a travelling partner.

    Musician Julien Gauthier, 44, was travelling along the Mackenzie River in Canada's sparsely populated Northwest Territories to record new sounds for a composition when the attack occurred.

    His travelling partner, biologist Camille Toscani, said the grizzly bear entered a camp near the village of Tulita during the early hours of Thursday morning (local time).

    Comment: Also recently: Russian pensioner 'eaten alive' by brown bear after joking about being mauled by one


    Snowflake

    August snow touches down in Colorado

    First White Stuff
    Colorado ski season is just around the corner.

    Arapahoe Basin, known for its higher elevation, saw its first dusting of white stuff for the 2019-2020 season early Thursday morning.

    "And so it begins. Not sure if it is snow, hail, sleet, slush or what, but the first white stuff of the season was high on the East Wall this morning," Arapahoe Basin COO Alan Henceroth announced on his blog Thursday morning.

    Comment: It's Snowing in August all over the world


    Fish

    Fish with 'two mouths' caught in upstate New York shocks anglers

    two mouth fish
    © Courtesy: Knotty Boys Fishing
    A woman in upstate New York made what some are calling "the catch of a lifetime" when she reeled in a fish that appears to have two mouths. When a photo of the fish was uploaded to Facebook, it unsurprisingly went viral.

    Debbie Geddes told Fox News that she caught the unique fish while she was out on Lake Champlain with her husband.

    "When this particular fish bit, it felt like I had a nice fish on," she explained. "I actually commented, 'I hope it's as big as it feels!' When we got it in the boat I couldn't believe what I was seeing! Two mouths! And yet this fish was healthy and thriving! Pretty amazing!"

    "We quickly took a few pictures and released the fish," she continued. That picture was eventually uploaded to Facebook by a co-worker of Geddes, Adam Facteau.

    Cloud Lightning

    Five people killed, over 150 injured by powerful lightning strikes in Poland's Tatra Mountains

    Four helicopters were involved in the rescue
    © REUTERSFour helicopters were involved in the rescue
    Four people have been killed and more than 30 injured when lighting struck different locations in Poland's Tatra Mountains, a spokeswoman for the country's air ambulance service says.

    Lightning hit a group of tourists on Giewont, a 1,894-metre mountain, after a sunny morning turned stormy, according to witnesses quoted on private broadcaster TVN24. The peak is a popular trekking destination in southern Poland.


    Comment: RT further reports that one thunderbolt struck the cross, travelled down the chains holding it in place then hit the group of 25 tourists.
    "We heard that after [the] lightning struck, people fell... the current then continued along the chains securing the ascent, striking everyone along the way. It looked bad," Jan Krzysztof, head of the TOPR Tatra volunteer search and rescue service said.

    Four people, including two children, were killed in Poland and a Czech tourist was killed by the same storm in neighboring Slovakia. Some 150 people were treated for burns, fractures, and heart problems, 34 of whom remain in hospital as of Friday afternoon. Three people are missing.

    The Tatras are the highest mountains in Poland, and Thursday's lightning storm was the region's worst since August 1937 when lightning strikes killed four people on the Giewont peak.
    Nuts!


    Kinga Czerwinska, an air ambulance service spokeswoman, said some of the injured were brought by helicopter to the hospital in Zakopane, in the Tatras, while others were taken elsewhere.

    Witnesses said the thunderstorm came suddenly on a day that began with clear weather.