Earth ChangesS


Snowflake

Record snow for numerous communities at Glacier National Park, Montana

Two Medicine restroom nearly completely covered.
© NPSTwo Medicine restroom nearly completely covered. Photo
Plowing has begun in Glacier National Park. The park has seen significant snowfall this year. Snow plowing operations have begun in Two Medicine, with snow drifts up to 15 to 20 feet deep, including roads and picnic areas.

The following press release was sent out by the National Park Service:

Cloud Precipitation

Major storm bringing an "atmospheric river" to San Francisco - months worth of rain expected, temporary flood barriers erected

Major storm brings flood barriers to SF, closes campsites, could rain out Giants
© Art Frisch, San Francisco Chronicle
An uncommonly intense April storm powered by an atmospheric river was expected to swamp Northern California all day Friday, prompting San Francisco officials to put up flood barriers, Yosemite to close campgrounds and Giants fans to lament that a game against the Los Angeles Dodgers might be postponed due to a rare AT&T Park rainout.

The storm began late Thursday and was forecast to continue into Saturday, dumping a total of 1 to 3 inches of rain in San Francisco and Oakland, according to the National Weather Service. In the North Bay, 3 to 6 inches were anticipated.

"This rainfall event itself could provide us with our normal rainfall for the entire month of April," said Roger Gass, a weather service meteorologist in Monterey.


Comment: Major flooding is on the rise and just one of many signs that there are great changes afoot on our planet:


Snowflake

Schweitzer ski resort in Idaho breaks all-time record with over 34 feet of snow

Schweitzer Mountain
© Schweitzer Mountain Resort Facebook pageSchweitzer Mountain
Schweitzer Ski Resort says they have broken their snowfall total set back in 1998.

The old record of 412 inches was surpassed earlier this week and that number continues to climb.

The new record of 418 inches at the village at Schweitzer comes out to be about 34 feet.


And the skiing and snowboarding will continue for another week.

Dig Chrismer, the marketing manager at Schweitzer, says they've extended their season until April 14th, 2018.

Tornado2

Eight tornadoes touch down across the Heartland

Crenshaw Road in Marion, Ill.
© Brittany Jacob/KFVSCrenshaw Road in Marion, Ill.
Eight tornadoes hit the Heartland on Tuesday, April 3, according to the National Weather Service. The latest report was a twister in New Madrid County, Missouri.

There were two tornadoes reported in Hickman County, Ky., one in Massac County, Ill., one in Williamson County, Ill., one in Livingston County, Ky, in Saline County, IL, one in Dunklin County, Mo and one in New Madrid County, Mo.

Comment: See also: Tornadoes and deadly storms strike in South, Midwest US


Attention

Young gray whale that washed ashore on Whidbey Island, Washington was emaciated, researchers say

Carcass of gray whale
© Cascadia ResearchCarcass of gray whale
The carcass of a 30-foot gray whale washed ashore on the west side of Whidbey Island, and an examination on Thursday showed the young female was emaciated, Cascadia Research said.

The carcass was first spotted on Tuesday.

"The whale was just under 30 feet long and determined to be emaciated, and the poor nutritional condition was likely a principal factor in its death," the Olympia-based Cascadia Research said. "The thorough examination did not reveal any indications of trauma from ship strike or signs of entanglement but a wide range of tissues were collected for examination for pathology, disease, biotoxins, and contaminants."

Attention

Dead sperm whale washes up on west coast of Newfoundland, Canada

The town of Humber Arm South will be tasked with removing this whale from the community.
© Colleen Connors/CBCThe town of Humber Arm South will be tasked with removing this whale from the community.
The carcass of a sperm whale has washed up on a beach near the town of Humber Arm South on Newfoundland's west coast.

On Thursday, the whale could be seen near Frenchman's Cove.

The carcass is swollen and guts could be seen spewing out of the water.

Because the mammal washed up within Humber Arm South's town limits, the community is responsible for disposing of the whale.

Fire

Antarctic ice shelves revealed to be rapidly melting...from below

Melting glaciers of Antarctica
© Konrad et al/Nature GeoscienceThe major glaciers of Antarctica, and the speed with which their grounding line is retreating.
The most extensive study of Antarctic glaciers yet conducted has some bad, if not surprising, news. An area the size of Greater London has melted from the underside of southern ice sheets in just six years. The finding confirms suspicions Antarctic ice loss is well under way, and future sea level rise will be very hard to stop.

Antarctica is surrounded by a mix of sea ice formed on water, and ice shelves. Ice shelves also float, forming when a glacier is buoyant enough that its front end rests on water rather than solid ground. The point where the glacier last touches rock beneath the waterline is known as the "grounding line", and depends on both coastal terrain, and the thickness of ice at that point. Consequently, movement of the grounding line can reveal changes in the underside of the ice shelf, something that is very hard to measure.

Getting into scuba gear and measuring the location of Antarctic grounding lines in person has certain drawbacks, so Dr Hannes Konrad of the University of Leeds used satellite observations of ice altitude and the way water beneath the ice induces surface movement to reveal the shifts in grounding lines for Antarctica's 65 largest glaciers and ice sheets between 2010 and 2016.

The movement has not been consistent, Konrad and co-authors report in Nature Geoscience, both because of local terrain and shifts in ocean currents. However, some glaciers have experienced dramatic movement backwards, indicating substantial thinning of the ice. Previous studies have measured just a third of Antarctica's coastline, providing a very incomplete picture.

"Our study provides clear evidence that retreat is happening across the ice sheet due to ocean melting at its base, and not just at the few spots that have been mapped before now," Konrad said in a statement. "This retreat has had a huge impact on inland glaciers, because releasing them from the seabed removes friction, causing them to speed up and contribute to global sea level rise."


Cloud Lightning

Footage shows Japan's Shinmoedake explode with volcanic lightning

Volcanic lightning at Shinmoedake, Japan
© Japan News-YomiuriVolcanic lightning at Shinmoedake is seen from Kirishima, Kagoshima Prefecture, on Thursday morning in Japan.
An explosive eruption occurred early Thursday morning at Shinmoedake, a volcano in the Kirishima mountain range straddling Miyazaki and Kagoshima prefectures, the Japan Meteorological Agency said the same day.

Volcanic smoke from the 1,421-meter Shinmoedake reached as high as 5,000 meters above the crater, the highest since a series of eruptions began on March 1. Minor pyroclastic flows poured in the direction of Takaharu, Miyazaki Prefecture, which is located southeast of the crater, some spreading about 800 meters from the crater.

This was the first time since March 25 that both an explosive eruption and pyroclastic flows were observed. The two prefectural governments said they had not received any reports of injuries or damage to buildings caused by the eruption. The agency said there is no need for immediate evacuation.


The Yomiuri Shimbun

Seismograph

5.3 magnitude earthquake that rattled Southern California was most powerful in years

SoCal quake
© U.S. Geological Survey
The magnitude-5.3 earthquake that rattled Southern California on Thursday was the strongest in the area several years.

Though there were no immediate reports of damage, the quake was felt across a wide area and was a blunt reminder that California is earthquake country. The U.S. Geological Survey put the epicenter about 23 miles off the Channel Islands, about 85 miles west of Los Angeles.

It was centered near the Eastern Santa Cruz Basin Fault Zone, Caltech seismologist Egill Hauksson said. "Earthquakes happen out there now and again. There's a major offshore fault system," he said.

Seismologist Lucy Jones said on Twitter that the fault system "moves Southern California around a bend of the San Andreas fault."

There is a slightly greater likelihood that the the temblor could trigger a larger earthquake, but that chance decreases with time, Hauksson said.

The last big earthquake in the Channel Islands region before Thursday's temblor was in 1981, which was a magnitude 6.0, Hauksson said. A magnitude 4.8 quake struck near the islands in 2013.

The last quake to be felt this widely in the L.A. area was a magnitude 4.4 in Encino in 2014. That quake also shook a wide area and was the largest in the Los Angeles area in four years. It was the strongest to hit directly under the Santa Monica Mountains in the 80 years.

Bizarro Earth

Miles-long crevice opens up overnight near Nariobi in Kenya's Rift Valley

crack east african rift valley
© Buzz60Experts say Africa will be split into two different continents in the future. Amassive crack appeared in the East African Rift Valley of Kenya.
It'll take tens of millions of years, but Africa may eventually split into two parts.

While geologists have known about this possibility for a while, it became news recently when a large crack, stretching several miles in length, made a sudden appearance in southwestern Kenya following heavy rain.

The tear, which continues to grow, collapsed part of a highway and "was accompanied by seismic activity in the area," said Lucia Perez Diaz, a postdoctoral researcher on tectonics at Royal Holloway, a university in London.

The crack is located in a region known as the East African Rift Valley. It measures more than 50 feet in depth and 65 feet across, according to National Geographic. A rift valley refers to a lowland region where tectonic plates rift, or move apart.

Comment: The earth has been literally 'opening up' in various locations around the globe, due in part to the current slowdown in earth's rotation: