Earth ChangesS


Attention

Homes and roads damaged by floodwater in Varna, Bulgaria

In Varna, several streets, underpasses and buildings were flooded after heavy rain battered Bulgaria’s third-largest city
In Varna, several streets, underpasses and buildings were flooded after heavy rain battered Bulgaria’s third-largest city
Over 70 mm of rain fell in the port city of Varna on Bulgaria's Black Sea coast, flooding streets and causing severe traffic disruption.

As much as 71.5 mm of rain fell in 24 hours between 04 and early 05 June. According to WMO figures, the city would normally see 46 mm of rain during the whole of June.

Quoting the regional governor of Varna, Stoyan Pasev, local media said that the floods and stormy weather had damaged at least 40 houses in the areas fo Aksakovo, Kumanovo and Klimentovo. At least 1 family has been left homeless.


Attention

Dead minke whale washes up in East Yorkshire, UK

WHALE

A dead whale has been discovered washed up on an East Yorkshire beach.

The four-metre long male minke whale was found washed up on the north side of Hornsea beach at around 8pm on Tuesday.

The Hornsea Coastguard team arrived and sadly discovered the dead whale.

Fire

Fuego volcanic eruption in Guatemala buried villages under meters of hot ash

In San Miguel Los Lotes close to Guatemala's most active volcano, firefighters are working hard, but hope is slim
Residents flee El Rodeo village after the Fuego volcano erupted
© CNNResidents flee El Rodeo village after the Fuego volcano erupted.
A rescue crew emerges from an immense cloud of fine grey dust carrying two stretchers that hold bodies recovered from houses engulfed by blistering lava from the nearby erupting Fuego volcano.

The recovered bodies are tightly wrapped in dusty white sheets. One barely fills half the stretcher - a young victim of the most deadly volcanic eruption to hit Guatemala in decades.

The official death toll from the Fuego disaster is 69 but the final number is likely to be far higher, with scores of people missing from dozens of communities cut off by the devastation.


Comment: That number has since been revised to 75. Another 200 people are missing.





Comment: This was an exceptional eruption, even for fiery Guatemala; its deadliest volcanic eruption since 1902.

Meanwhile Hawaii's Kilauea is still highly active following its strongest eruption in a century.

Earth's rockin and rollin!


Attention

Swimmer dies after shark attack in Brazil

It is believed a tiger shark like this one attacked the teenager.
© GETTY IMAGESIt is believed a tiger shark like this one attacked the teenager.
A beautiful day at the beach turned into every man's nightmare for a Brazilian teenager.

Jose Ernesto da Silva had his penis ripped off by a shark as he swam with pals over the weekend, according to reports.

Shocked onlookers rushed into the water to assist the terrified young man and pulled him from the ocean.

He died in hospital Monday.

The 18-year-old had been instructed by lifeguards to come closer to shore prior to the attack, Brazilian media reported. Signs warned that deeper water could result in an attack.

Cloud Precipitation

Severe summer hailstorm destroys fruit trees in Cyprus

heavy hail in the Troodos Mountains temporarily turning the landscape and road network white.
Heavy hail in the Troodos Mountains temporarily turning the landscape and road network white.
Torrential rains and enormous hailstones that created a winter wonderland at the start of summer by blanketing the mountains in white caused mixed feelings on Monday, as some gushed over the rarity of the phenomenon while others mourned their destroyed crops.

The hailstorm lasted for about an hour in the early afternoon and left almost no fruit on trees. The produce the storm destroyed included pears, cherries, nectarines and peaches.

"In around a month we would have begun cutting nectarines and peaches, then apples. Now, there's nothing left to cut," producer Vlamis Avgousti from Amiandos told state broadcaster CyBC.

He said that the intensity of the hailstorm and the size of the stones had damaged trees so badly that "we will have a problem also next year".

Community leader of Amiandos, Kriton Kyriakides, said this was the first time in his life he had experienced something like this in summer.

Cloud Precipitation

Severe hailstorm smashes windshield, nose of American Airlines plane, forces emergency landing in Texas

American Airlines plane damaged by hailstorm
American Airlines plane damaged by hailstorm
American Airlines flight 1897 was forced to make an emergency landing in El Paso, Texas, Sunday night after the Airbus A319 suffered severe damage during a hail storm over New Mexico.

The Phoenix-bound flight, which had departed at 6:57 p.m. local time from San Antonio, was forced to divert to El Paso roughly an hour after takeoff.

According to reports, none of the 130 passengers or the crew members aboard the flight suffered any injuries; however, a few lunches were lost to the severe turbulence, The Dallas News reported.

Photos shared on Twitter show the plane's nose dented inward and windshield severely cracked.


Comment: What's up with the weather? Huge hail stones damage multiple commercial planes

Rome to Milan plane encounters violent hailstorm, destroys its nose cone and shatters cockpit window


Airplane

Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Hail damages US aircraft, huge hail in Italy and June snow for Canada

American Airlines plane damaged by hailstorm
American Airlines plane damaged by hailstorm
An American Airlines flight over Texas was forced to make an emergency landing after being heavily damaged, smashed and battered by a sever hail storm which shattered the nose cone, windshield and side windows of the plane. Huge hail stones in Italy and record snow in Newfoundland St Johns Canada on June 4th, buy the media quickly removed the videos, but I was able other images on Twitter.


Sources

Comment: Rome to Milan plane encounters violent hailstorm, destroys its nose cone and shatters cockpit window

What's up with the weather? Huge hail stones damage multiple commercial planes


Snowflake

Global cooling: Snow in June for Newfoundland, Canada

snowman
Some people waking up in parts of Newfoundland got a wintry jolt when they looked out their window this morning and saw white.

Areas around Gander and St. John's got a light dusting of snow as temperatures dipped to about -1 C, with a wind chill of about -7 C.

Some called it a cruel Spring joke that yielded some bemused Twitter comments.


Fire

State of emergency declared as heatwave in Mexico breaks records, melts traffic lights, kills 3 people

A traffic light in Torreón, Coahuila, melts in the heat.
A traffic light in Torreón, Coahuila, melts in the heat.
A traffic light in Torreón, Coahuila, melts in the heat.Heat wave causes 3 deaths, economic boost, melting traffic lights Temperatures up to 49 C are expected until Tuesday

Parts of Mexico continue to swelter in a record-breaking, prolonged heat wave that has caused at least three deaths, given a boost to the economy and even caused traffic lights to melt in two northern states.

Authorities in Chihuahua - where temperatures have been as high as 48 C - said an 18-year-old indigenous Tarahumara man and a 17-year-old male died due to heat-related illnesses.

A 33-year-old homeless man also died in Saltillo, Coahuila, due to heatstroke.

According to the National Meteorological Service (SMN), temperatures of up to 49 are expected to continue in the north of the country until next Tuesday, June 5.

". . . What we're observing is that as the heat wave progresses, the high [atmospheric] pressure is not decreasing, so it's going to strengthen in Chihuahua, Coahuila, Nuevo Léon, Durango and Zacatecas," SMN general coordinator Alberto Hernández told a press conference.

Comment: Mexico scorches while Europe is underwater and Canada is seeing unusually heavy 'spring snow': For more, check out SOTT's monthly documentary: SOTT Earth Changes Summary - April 2018: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs


Fire

Fuego Volcano Eruption Guatemala's Deadliest Since 1902: Death Toll Rises to 75 - UPDATES

Fuego volcano eruption
© Orlando Estrada/AFP/Getty ImagesA policeman carries an elderly evacuee in Alotenango, 55 km southwest of Guatemala
President considers declaring state of emergency in region as smoke and ash forces closure of capital's La Aurora airport

At least 25 people, including three children, have been killed and nearly 300 injured on Sunday in the most violent eruption of Guatemala's Fuego volcano in more than four decades, officials said.

Fuego volcano, whose name means "fire" in English, spewed an 8km (five-mile) stream of lava and belched a thick plume of black smoke and ash that rained onto the capital and other regions.

Sergio Cabanas, the general secretary of Guatemala's Conred disaster agency, said on the radio: "It's a river of lava that overflowed its banks and affected the Rodeo village. There are injured, burned and dead people."

Mario Cruz, spokesman for the volunteer firefighter corps, said: "We have seven confirmed dead, four adults and three kids, who were already taken to the morgue." He added that 3,100 people had evacuated the area so far. The disaster agency later updated the death toll to 25.

President Jimmy Morales said he had convened his ministers and was considering declaring a state of emergency in the departments of Chimaltenango, Escuintla and Sacatepequez.

It is the second time the volcano has erupted this year, setting off loud explosions and spewing ash into the sky. Soot blanketed cars and houses in the nearby villages of San Pedro Yepocapa and Sangre de Cristo.


Comment: In the past few days Indonesia's Mount Merapi had the biggest eruption this year, as on-going volcanic and seismic activity continues at Hawaii's Kilauea volcano.

Update 5th June 2018

BBC:
Soldiers are helping firefighters search for missing people after Sunday's horrific volcanic eruption in Guatemala, when torrents of superheated rock, ash and mud destroyed villages.

The official death toll from the destruction at the Fuego volcano has risen to 69, the authorities say.

Thousands of people are being housed in temporary shelters.

Volcanologists report the eruption, which sent ash up to 10km (33,000ft) into the sky, is now over.

The eruption also generated pyroclastic flows - fast-moving mixtures of very hot gas and volcanic matter - descending down the slopes, engulfing communities such as El Rodeo and San Miguel Los Lotes.

PBS NewsHour:
Why did Fuego's pyroclastic flow kill so many?

Fuego's lethal eruption took the form of a pyroclastic flow, the same searing cloud of debris that cooked and choked the city of Pompeii after Mount Vesuvius exploded in 79 AD.

On its surface, a pyroclastic flow looks like a falling cloud of ash. But if you could peer into the cloud, you would find a really hot and fast-moving storm of solid rock, said Janine Krippner, a volcanologist at Concord University who studies pyroclastic flows.

"It's not really like anything else on Earth," Krippner said. People are familiar with avalanches of rock or landslides, but pyroclastic flows move much more quickly, traveling more than 50 miles per hour. The upper part of the pyroclastic flow resembles a grainy sandstorm, but it is filled with hot gases, whose temperatures range from 400 to 1,300 degrees Fahrenheit.

"The bottom [of this cloud] is a jumble of chaotic [lava] rocks. It's large boulders that are breaking up into smaller pieces," Krippner said. "They can knock trees down like matchsticks and destroy houses. They can send cars flying. They're incredibly dangerous.".....

"When you reach the surface with magma, there is a lot less pressure because there's a lot less rock, so the gas comes out," Krippner said. "During a violent eruption, that gas expands rapidly, forming bubbles in the magma. That then explodes, blowing the magma apart like shaking a bottle of coke and then opening the top."

But instead of foam, Fuego released sprays of solid rock.

Krippner said Fuego's latest eruption produced a larger-than-average pyroclastic flow, given it spread more than 10 kilometers downslope of the volcano crater. This may explain why it took so many by surprise.

More than 3,100 people have been evacuated and 1.7 million people have been affected by the eruption, according to CONRED, the government agency for disaster reduction, reported by CNN. Guatemala's President Jimmy Morales has declared three days of national mourning.

The eruption officially ended late Sunday, said Guatemala's National Institute of Seismology, Vulcanology, Meteorology and Hydrology. "The eruption ... is reaching its end with 14.763 feet of ash and weak-to-moderate explosions and incandescence in its crater," it said in a statement.

But it warned there could be new eruptions, and residents in the surrounding areas should be on alert for mudslides containing volcanic material.

Residents flee El Rodeo village after the Fuego volcano erupted
© CNNResidents flee El Rodeo village after the Fuego volcano erupted.
BBC:
How exceptional was the eruption?

Fuego is one of Latin America's most active volcanoes. A major eruption devastated nearby farms in 1974, but no deaths were recorded.

Another eruption in February this year sent ash 1.7km (1.1 mile) into the sky.

Sunday's event was on a much greater scale.

This eruption is Guatemala's deadliest such event since 1902, when an eruption of the Santa Maria volcano killed thousands of people.
Update 6th June 2018

RT reports:
The death toll from the ongoing eruption of Guatemala's Fuego volcano (Volcano of Fire) climbed to 75 people on Tuesday. The bodies were recovered by search and rescue teams, Guatemala's National Institute of Forensic Studies confirmed, saying that only 23 have been identified so far. It is feared that the number of victims can rise substantially since 192 people still remain unaccounted for.