Earth ChangesS


Better Earth

SOTT Focus: SOTT Earth Changes Summary - June 2018: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs

ss_june
This past month of June saw many areas of the planet inundated with downpours of all shapes and sizes; from violent hailstorms and thunderstorms in parts of Asia (some of them carrying fish, shrimp and octopuses) and Europe, to an amazing mix of hurricane like winds, heavy rain, and floods in the US, Mexico and parts of South America.

Volcanic activity continues to break records around the BBM. The Kilauea volcano continued to wreak havoc on the big island of Hawaii, destroying houses and engulfing the area with toxic fumes. Meanwhile, after years of continued activity, Guatemala's Fire volcano erupted violently, causing the deaths of at least 109 people. Hundreds are still missing and entire towns were covered with meters of ash.

Other than the spectacular nature of these eruptions, the important point to remember is that all that ash saturates the upper layers of the atmosphere reflecting solar rays and promoting water condensation and ice formation. This of course is not good news given the current solar minimum.

It's quite possible that, as we move forward, global temperatures will continue to plummet, and given the massive amounts of water pouring down, next winter may well be a rough ride for many in the Northern Hemisphere.

Speaking of cold temperatures, unseasonable snow continued to make headlines even during late spring and the beginning of summer across both Northern and Southern climes. The cold snaps hit the US, Canada, Chile, Australia, Ukraine and Austria; surprising the population, and damaging crops.

Increasingly strong hailstorms and bigger hail stones have also been reported all over the world. The US, Greece, Italy, Serbia, India and Russia were the most affected this month.

Check it out below:


Comment:
Check out the other releases:



Snowflake Cold

More than half of Nova Scotia blueberry crop wiped out by JUNE killer frost

frost damage crops
© Ann Millen/The Canadian PressThe toll of Nova Scotia's unusual 'killer' frost in early June on the province's wild blueberry crop is in, with growers estimating at least 60% of the crop was damaged by the cold weather.
Blueberry growers in Nova Scotia say about 60% of their wild crop was damaged by a killer frost in June, dealing a major blow to the province's largest agricultural export crop.

Barron Blois, president of the Wild Blueberry Producers Association of Nova Scotia, said Wednesday that the estimate is based on reports from growers who've been inspecting fields that normally yield as much as 60 million pounds of the fruit annually.

The Kennetcook-based farmer says government disaster relief cheques won't be distributed until after provincial authorities have completed damage assessments, leaving many farmers facing large bills and limited income.

Comment: Crop failures are likely to become more frequent as weather patterns around the world become more erratic.


Arrow Down

At least 10 people dead as melting snow triggers landslide in Afghanistan

landslide
At least 10 people were killed and hundreds of homes destroyed in a remote area of northeastern Afghanistan after melting snow triggered a landslide, officials said Thursday.

A mountain lake in Panjshir, a province north of Kabul known for its snowcapped peaks, overflowed and sent water and mud cascading over Peshghor village, Omar Mohammadi, spokesman for the disaster management ministry, told AFP.

Jamil Ahmad was lying in bed just before midnight when he said he heard a sound like "jets" flying overhead.

"Somebody shouted 'Flood!' and I ran away with my family to higher ground," Ahmad told AFP by telephone.

"The people started firing (weapons) into the air to warn others about the flood."


Cloud Lightning

Video taken in Colorado of lightning bolt hitting tree, causing it to explode

Zap zap
Zap!
Zap! This video is electrifying. A Colorado man caught this incredible video of a lightning bolt striking a nearby tree. You won't be able to take your eyes off of it.

Todd Jones shot the video with his smartphone and posted it on Facebook. You can see it strike the top of the tree and then arc down the trunk.

Some small branches shoot off of the tree and go flying. A woman left the home nearby just moments before the lightning strike.


Ice Cube

Gigantic iceberg A-68 that broke off Larsen ice shelf blocked by dense sea ice, surprising scientists

A-68 larcen c ice shelf
Scientists tracking a massive iceberg that broke free from Antarctica’s Larsen C Ice Shelf last year say dense sea-ice cover has so far prevented it from drifting far out to sea. It is shown above in July, 2018
Scientists tracking a massive iceberg that broke free from Antarctica's Larsen C Ice Shelf last year say dense ice cover has so far prevented it from drifting far out to sea.

An animation showing its movement over the last few months reveals how the trillion-plus ton Iceberg A-68 has shifted as it's battered by ocean currents, tides, and winds in the Weddell Sea.

While the huge chunk of ice, estimated to be about the size of Delaware, has moved around some, the experts say its surroundings have kept it somewhat locked into place.

Iceberg A-68 is the sixth largest iceberg on record since scientists began keeping track, and its separation from the ice shelf sparked fears about its future impacts on global sea levels.

Despite all the activity in the Weddell Sea, 'its northern end has repeatedly been grounded in shallower water near Bawden Ice Rise,' according to Project Midas researchers, who have been monitoring the iceberg over the last year.

Comment: At the time A-68 broke off from the Larsen ice shelf global warmists were decrying this as proof of warming, and yet there is so much sea ice that the ice berg hasn't moved very much. It's been a similar story with recent polar expeditions where sea ice was so dense that scientists, many convinced that soon 'children won't know what snow is', were unable to get to their destination. The question remains: Because we are seeing widespread cooling on our planet - at least above ground - what caused the ice shelf to break off in the first place? The cause could lie below, in the form of volcanic activity: And we can find other clues in the uptick in fissures we're seeing elsewhere on the planet:


Attention

'Terrifying' noise heard in the sky of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Strange sounds
On June 12, 2018, YouTuber 'Joey Walker' recorded a clip of a scary noise he heard in the sky about 1:00 a.m. He reports that noise had been going on for about an hour and a half.


Windsock

Monster dust storm sweeps across southern Arizona

A fast moving haboob approaches storm chasers in Arizona
© COURTESY OF MIKE OLBINSKIA fast moving haboob approaches storm chasers in Arizona.
Nothing says "Armageddon" like a mile-high wall of dust racing to swallow you at highway speeds. Commuters on Arizona Interstates 17 and 8 ran into exactly that shortly after 5 p.m. Monday. The culprit was a towering dust storm, along the leading edge of a vigorous thunderstorm complex, known as a haboob.

Arizonans not only dealt with dust but also hurricane-force wind gusts, hail and torrential rain.

"It was one of those days where we had just about everything," said Brandon Wright, a meteorologist and weather producer at the Weather Channel in Atlanta. "There was hail, wind, flooding and blowing dust. That's about as severe as it gets out there."

Shortly after 4 p.m., monsoonal storms fired along the Mogollon Rim in the Tonto National Forest of Central Arizona. The line raced west, snarling traffic in the Phoenix metro just in time for the afternoon commute. As cool outflow surged ahead of the encroaching storms, strong winds kicked up a curtain of dust high into the sky. Before long, severe thunderstorm warnings were hoisted as the city was plunged into a menacing mass of rain, lightning and burnt-red soil.


Comment: Last November an unseasonably late haboob dust storm hit Phoenix, Arizona. In May powerful 'freak' dust storms killed over 125 people in north India, the highest death toll in decades. Last month an epic dust storm completely engulfed Mars.

See also: Cosmic climate change: Is the cause of all this extreme weather to be found in outer space?


Music

'Just crazy': Strange sounds heard in Baron, Oklahoma

Strange sounds (stock)
Strange trumpeting sounds were recorded and uploaded to YouTube by user 'Jacob Sullivan' on June 27, 2018. He reports that the sounds have 'been happening for a few days now.'

Please excuse the foul language.


Question

'That is just too weird': Eerie sounds heard in Oklahoma City sky

Strange sounds on OKC, OK
© YouTube/Beau Sisson
On June 22, 2018, YouTube user 'Beau Sisson' uploaded video footage from his truck of 'strange and eerie sounds in the sky, coming from all directions.'


Cloud Precipitation

Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Typhoon Maria Pacific, Hurricane Chris Atlantic and food supplies

Typhoon Maria
While Hurricane Chris churns in the Atlantis, Typhoon Maria brushed Northern Taiwan on its way to destroy corn crops in China. A look at Native American foods, and whether you have the ability to forage or even know what to look for while out in fields or forests. I also show you some of my balcony garden where I grow sprouts with some sprouting tips.


Sources