Earth ChangesS


Cloud Lightning

Four paratroopers struck by lightning during training at Fort Bragg, North Carolina

lightning
Fort Bragg officials said four paratroopers were hit by lightning during a training exercise Monday.

Officials said it happened around 6:16 p.m. Monday. Lightning struck a communications center near a water trailer.

The four soldiers struck were near the trailer, and two of them were touching it, officials said.

Three of the paratroopers were released from the hospital later Monday. The fourth was released Tuesday afternoon.

CBS 17 will update this story when more information becomes available.

Cloud Lightning

Lightning strikes kill 5 across West Bengal, India

lightning
Five persons were killed today in lightning strikes and a man drowned in a river in West Bengal, which was lashed by heavy monsoon rains and thunderstorm since morning, a state disaster management official said.

A seven-year-old boy was killed in a lightning strike at Bhomragora village in Bandwan block of Purulia district, while two other deaths due to lightning strikes was reported from Rajendrapur of Basirhat II block and Keutepara of Bongaon in North 24 Parganas district, he said.

A woman from Basanti block of Charpara village and a man from Namkhana block of Uttar Chandanpiri village of South 24 Parganas districts were also killed in lightning strike, he said.

Rainbow

Viewer captures fire rainbow during drive in Galveston, Texas

Circumhorizontal arc over Galveston, TX
An Eyewitness News viewer was lucky enough to capture a colorful fire rainbow on video in Galveston - and it was an incredible sight!

Technically, it's neither a rainbow nor fire.

The National Weather Service says it is actually called a circumhorizontal arc that forms when you have ice crystals in high clouds.


Sun

Sundog appears over Cornwall, UK

Sundogs often form in pairs on either side of the sun, looking like detached pieces of rainbow
Sundog over Cornwall, UK
© Frances Watts
This is the moment a rare sundog appeared in the sky, making it look like there was a halo over Cornwall .

People across the duchy were sharing their photos of the phenomenon last night which created a 'second sun' in the sky.

The halo effect appeared over St Ives , while in Newquay it looked like a streak of rainbow alongside the sun.

Yesterday was the hottest day of the year so far, and forecasters say it could get hotter, with no sign of a let up in the sun for the next few days.

The Met Office has issued a heatwave warning with an 80 per cent chance we could see potentially dangerous levels of hot weather between today, Tuesday, and Thursday.

Ice Cube

Antarctica is even colder than scientists thought

antarctica
© Ted Scambos, NSIDC/University of Colorado-BoulderBlowing snow conditions at a camp site near Vostok Station in Antarctic summer.
From the AGU and the "but, but, the continent is melting!" department.

Tiny valleys near the top of Antarctica's ice sheet reach temperatures of nearly minus 100 degrees Celsius (minus 148 degrees Fahrenheit) in the winter, a new study finds. The results could change scientists' understanding of just how low temperatures can get at Earth's surface, according to the researchers.

Scientists announced in 2013 they had found the lowest temperatures on Earth's surface: Sensors on several Earth-observing satellites measured temperatures of minus 93 degrees Celsius (minus 135 degrees Fahrenheit) in several spots on the East Antarctic Plateau, a high snowy plateau in central Antarctica that encompasses the South Pole. But the researchers revised that initial study with new data and found the temperatures actually reach minus 98 degrees Celsius (minus 144 degrees Fahrenheit) during the southern polar night, mostly during July and August.

When the researchers first announced they had found the coldest temperatures on Earth five years ago, they determined that persistent clear skies and light winds are required for temperatures to dip this low. But the new study adds a twist to the story: Not only are clear skies necessary, but the air must also be extremely dry, because water vapor traps some heat in the air.

Snowflake Cold

Global cooling: Record cold in Slovakia

Snow
© Pali Kľučka
Along with rare summer snow in High Tatras mountains.

Coldest June 23rd ever

On Saturday in Slovakia the cold was primarily manifested in higher mountain climates. On Lomnicki peak the temperature reached a high of only -2.8 C. This is the coldest high for June 23 in the history of observation, says the Slovak Hydrometeorological Institute.

The peaks of Krivan (2495 m) saw a weak snow cover, while Sedielka (2376 m) saw ankle-deep snow on Sunday.

Thanks to Peto Kuchar for this link

Snowflake

Global cooling: Winter returns to Romania - In the summer

Balea Lake
Balea Lake, Romania, 24 June 2018
Temperature stands at zero degrees (32 F).

24 June 2018 - On Saturday morning the snow measured 2 cm at Balea Lake, at 2,000 meters above sea level in the Fagaras Mountains.

And it was cold, with the temperature only zero degrees, according to meteorologists.

Access to the area can only be done by cable car, Transfagarasan being closed to traffic until 1 July.

Thanks to Argiris Diamantis in the Netherlands for this link

Attention

Dead humpback whale found at Boatswain Point, South Australia

A Humpback Whale has washed up at Boatswain Point and has died on a reef about a 200m from the shore.
© High EdgeA Humpback Whale has washed up at Boatswain Point and has died on a reef about a 200m from the shore.
A whale has washed up at Boatswain Point and has died on a reef roughly 200m from the shore.

District Manager of the Lower South East, Ross Anderson from Natural Resources South East gave a comment on the current status of the whale and where it sits with NRSE.

"The animal is a Humpback whale and became stranded on the reef by itself," Mr Anderson said. "Any drag marks are likely to be as a result of tides and swell moving the animal in shallow water.

"The whale is now dead and we will be letting it decompose naturally."

Snowflake

Global cooling: Residents of Cape Breton Highlands, Nova Scotia wake up to summer snow

Malcolm MacEachern was among those sharing this snowy image of North Mountain, taken on Tuesday morning.
Malcolm MacEachern was among those sharing this snowy image of North Mountain, taken on Tuesday morning.
'I haven't seen snow this late in the year since a long time'

Morning commuters making their way through the Cape Breton Highlands were greeted with a slick and unwelcome surprise early Tuesday morning in the form of snow-covered roads.

Saltwire meteorologist Cindy Day is reporting that somewhere between five and seven centimetres were on the ground in some of the higher elevation areas of Cape Breton as the sun was coming up.

"It was a little bit unexpected," Day told the Cape Breton Post. "The expected low temperature was to be about 3 C and that's a temperature measured a metre and a half above the ground at reporting stations, so anytime you start going up in the Highlands, any kind of elevation you have that risk of mixing."

Comment: Global cooling: Summer snow falls and settles on the ground in parts of central Newfoundland, Canada


Cloud Lightning

Lightning bolt kills a dozen cows in Henryetta, Oklahoma

cattle killed in a lightning strike
© Jason DonathanThe cattle killed in a lightning strike
A lightning strike on a ranch in Oklahoma was not only a tragedy for the owners, but it also turned into a reminder of the lack of knowledge most people have about livestock production.

Jason Donathan, a cattle rancher from Henryetta, OK shared a photo with KOTV Channel 6 in Tulsa showing approximately 12 dead cattle under a tree. The group of primarily cows was killed by a lightning strike.

KOTV meteorologist Lacey Swope shared the picture on her Facebook page on June 24.

In the post Swope writes, "A cattle rancher's worst nightmare took place in Henryetta, OK last night. Jason Donathan posted this pic showing the devastation after lightning likely struck the tree as the cows were standing under it."