Earth ChangesS


Camera

Gaping sinkhole opens near Australian PM's home

Sydney sinkhole
© ABC/Ursula Malone
A sinkhole has opened up near Malcolm Turnbull's Sydney harbourside mansion rupturing a gas pipe.

Fire and Rescue NSW were called to Wentworth Street, Point Piper, this morning after the footpath collapsed following the freak weather which had smashed Sydney the day before.

"There was a leak from a gas pipe," a Fire and Rescue NSW spokesman told The Australian. "It was due to the weather, now whether that is a cracked pipe or not I'm not sure at this stage.

"We were notified about it at 7.12am — we responded with a pumper, a station officer and three fire fighters. "Every pumper has air-monitoring equipment on board which can check for explosive limits and deprivation of oxygen and hydrogen sulphide.


Rainbow

Rare 'fire rainbow' spotted in skies over Humberston, UK

Fire rainblow over Humberston
A rare "fire rainbow" was spotted in the sky over Humberston.

Formally known as a circumhorizontal arc or circumhorizon arc (CHA), it appeared horizontal in the sky, rather than making an arc towards the earth.

Spotted at lunchtime yesterday, the person who took it said she spotted it high up in the sky - and only just managed to capture what was left of it on her phone camera as it disappeared.

"I've never seen one like it before as it was horizontal rather than vertical and was a lot clearer before I managed to take a photograph," she said. Not wishing to be named, she said she had to tip her head right back to see it. "I just wish I had been able to get it on camera before it disappeared."

Bug

Thousands of dead honey bees wash ashore on Naples, Florida beach

dead bee
© n/a
A bee expert told WBBH that seeing bees wash up at the beach is very unusual

Thousands of dead and dying bees are washing up on a popular beach in Southern Florida.

Naples beach goers had to watch where they stepped Tuesday after some people say they have been stung just along the shoreline, according to NBC affiliate WBBH-TV.

Martha Duff lives in Naples and recently had a painful encounter with the bees.


"I've been stung a couple of times and at first, I didn't know what it was and then I realized and then I had an allergic reaction," Duff said.

Naples residents say the problem started only a few days ago. They are both concerned and confused.

"Why are there bees? Where are they coming from? And why are they in a very specific area of the beach?" Duff said.

A bee expert told WBBH that seeing bees wash up at the beach is very unusual. The cause could be anything from a nearby pesticide spraying forcing them to the water or a swarm flying overhead that became exhausted and flew into the water.

Cloud Precipitation

Warning issued to stay off roads as heavy rain causes flooding in Fiji

 The main Queens Road in Fiji's west flooded near Nadi
© Fiji Roads Authority The main Queens Road in Fiji's west flooded near Nadi
The authorities in Fiji are telling people to stay off the roads in the west and northwest of the main island as heavy rain continues to lash the country.

There is flooding in the towns of Tavua, Rakiraki, Nadi, and Lautoka.

A heavy rain warning remains in force and the flood alert continues for low-lying areas near major rivers around the country.

The tropical disturbance causing the deluge is southeast of Kadavu with forecasters saying another low is approaching Fiji from the west.

In Nadi, the river has burst its banks and parts off Lautoka are flooded as well.

An advisory councillor from Rakiraki, Nila Rao, said her community was still recovering from heavy flooding in December.



Snowflake Cold

Thickest snowfall in 25 years for Kashmir Valley, India

Kashmir Valley receives thickest snowfall in 25 years
Kashmir Valley receives thickest snowfall in 25 years
Earlier, it had snowed heavily in February 2006 but it wasn't as much as this year's snowfall. This year's wildest washout is coinciding with 'chillai kalan', which is the harshest period of winter in Kashmir.

The beautiful Kashmir Valley turned into a picturesque after receiving a thickest whiteout in 25 years this February. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) release dated February 3 mentioned that the minimum temperatures were less than 5.0°C at many places over Jammu & Kashmir and at a few places over Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand. January received three spells of heavy snowfall of over 16.2cm in January alone. A total of 23cm snowfall has been recorded so far in the Valley this year, IMD reported.

Earlier, it had snowed heavily in February 2006 but it wasn't as much as this year's snowfall. This year's wildest washout is coinciding with 'chillai kalan', which is the harshest period of winter in Kashmir. The 'chillai kalan' lasts from December 21 to January 30. The heavy snowfall in the Kashmir Valley triggered landslides at several places, bringing normal life to a standstill.



Attention

About 20 dead pelicans and gannets found at Caswell Beach, North Carolina

Approximately 20 dead pelicans and ganets were found on Caswell Beach.
© Kathy CarneyApproximately 20 dead pelicans and gannets were found on Caswell Beach.
The Sea Biscuit Wildlife Shelter tagged and removed about 20 dead birds from Caswell Beach and Oak Island Monday afternoon.

Janet Kurz, a volunteer at the shelter, went to Caswell Beach to clean up the scene.

"I don't like seeing any dead birds but when you see nine at one time it kind of smacks you in the face that there is something that isn't right," said Kurz.

Kurz said she walked along the beach and found nine birds, a combination of pelicans and gannets. Kurz took pictures of each one and noticed a familiar trend.

"Seven had wing injuries, all identical in the same place same kind of injury," said Kurz. She recognized the injury because it's the same one several of the birds recovering at the shelter.

Clinic Director Mary Ellen Rogers has a theory to explain these trends.

Wildlife experts do not think foul play was involved.
© Seabiscuit Wildlife ShelterWildlife experts do not think foul play was involved.

Snowflake

Rare 'snownado' forms on Scottish mountain

snownado in Scotland
© Deadline News'Snownado': Skiers and walkers were dwarfed on Cairngorm Mountain near Aviemore by the stunning spiralling pillar of snow
This is the moment a rare 'snownado' touched down on a mountain in the Scottish Highlands, whirling snow and ice in a circle at least 100ft off the ground.

Skiers and walkers were dwarfed on Cairngorm Mountain near Aviemore by the stunning spiralling pillar of snow - also known as a 'willy willy' - which disappeared as quickly as it appeared.

It comes as Britain faces being plunged into a cold snap over the next 10 days as temperatures drop below -10C, with many parts of the country already hit by snow and flooding affecting the roads and railways.

James Madden, of Exacta Weather, said eastern and south-eastern parts will be the first to see wintry showers as temperatures drop.

He told The Express: 'There will be widespread frosts and ice problems.

'By the end of the week and into the weekend we could see snow popping up almost anywhere.'


Blue Planet

6.3 earthquake strikes off southern Pakistan

Pakistan earthquake
© earthquake.usgs.gov
A powerful 6.3-magnitude earthquake has hit off the southern coast of Pakistan, the US Geological Survey reported.

The quake, which was originally registered as magnitude 6.6, hit 23 kilometers southwest of the city of Pasni at a depth of 10 kilometers. The cities of Turbat and Gwadar are also within 90 kilometers from the epicenter of the quake.

Bizarro Earth

Major slide blocks Highway 17, thousands without power, flooding reported in Santa Cruz, CA from 6 inches of rain in 24 hours

santa cruz ca mudslide
© Shmuel Thaler -- Santa Cruz SentinelArnie Huddin's Ford pick up truck is removed from Highway 17 after being destroyed by a mudslide north of Vine Hill Road on Tuesday, Feb. 7, 2017.
Highway 17 is closed in both directions through Tuesday night, Highway 9 is blocked in several areas, and flooding is reported throughout Santa Cruz County, with thousands without power after roughly 6 inches of rain fell the last 24 hours. The latest in a series of storms triggered mudslides, uprooted trees and knocked out power lines from south county lowlands to high in the Santa Cruz Mountains.

The San Lorenzo River breached its banks and flooded Highway 9 near Paradise Park about noon. The California Highway Patrol blocked Highway 9 near the Tannery Arts Center.

At about 1 p.m., Soquel Creek in Capitola Village rose to just a few feet from its banks near the river mouth at Capitola Beach. Aptos Creek in Rio del Mar had not crested and had not breached its banks by 1:30 p.m. near the mouth at Seacliff State Beach.

A massive mudslide struck three vehicles on Highway 17 at roughly 10:15 a.m., flipping one truck over, closing the highway and trapping hundreds of drivers unable to proceed. The California Highway Patrol has shut down both lanes of Highway 17 near Jarvis Road, according to CHP Officer Trista Drake, who said no one was hurt when the slide hit the vehicles. The highway near the slide area would be closed in both directions through Tuesday night, she said. "The hill is unstable and the slide keeps spilling over into the other lanes," Drake said.

Bizarro Earth

'I've never seen it go over Highway 9' - San Lorenzo River rising to major flood state between Santa Cruz and Felton, California

san lorenzo river flooding
© Dan Coyro -- Santa Cruz SentinelBen Lomond Firefighters rescue Rachel Turner's dogs and escort her from her flooded home on Old Covered Bridge Road in Felton Tuesday morning when the San Lorenzo River hit flood stage.
The San Lorenzo River is overflowing its banks in several spots between Santa Cruz and Felton where the river rose to major flood stage. In downtown Santa Cruz, the river reached moderate flood stage -- 23.3 feet -- just after noon, and it's still rising, KSBW meteorologist Art Jarrett said.

Santa Cruz County officials sounded a flood warning siren Tuesday morning, notifying Felton Grove residents of impending danger. Firefighters rescued residents who were trapped inside their homes by flood waters. Reporter Phil Gomez witnessed the river overflowing onto Highway 9 at Sycamore Grove, just north of Santa Cruz. Sycamore Grove looks like a lake.

"Highway 9 is underwater. I've never seen the San Lorenzo River go over Highway 9," Gomez said.

County spokesman Jason Hoppin said, "We have several rivers at or approaching flood stage (San Lorenzo, Soquel and Corralitos), with rain expected to continue this afternoon. We are activating the Emergency Operations Center."

An atmospheric river flowing off the Pacific Ocean pounded Santa Cruz County with rain throughout Monday night and into Tuesday morning. More heavy rain is forecast for this afternoon, and county officials are bracing for more rivers and creeks possibly overflowing in a few hours.

"It's going to get worse before it gets better," Hoppin said.

KSBW Meteorologist Lee Solomon reported flash flooding in Paradise Park, and the Tannery Arts Center in Santa Cruz.

Solomon said, "The Santa Cruz Mountains have received a deluge. Way too much rain in a very short period of time. A flash flood is occurring in the Paradise Park area. Move to higher ground immediately."

NOAA's San Lorenzo River gauge at Big Trees recorded water levels rising to 23 1/2 feet at noon. The river's major flood stage is 21.8 feet, and minor flood stage is 16.1 feet.

Over in Scotts Valley, Highway 17 is closed in all directions. A mudslide caused one driver's SUV to flip and crash on Highway 17's northbound lanes, near Vinehill Road. The California Highway Patrol is diverting all drivers off the highway, and there is no estimated time for reopening.

"The slide is unstable," the CHP said.

Tuesday's atmospheric river-powered storm has so far caused more severe problems than the first atmospheric river that blasted the Central Coast in January.

"The ground is already soaked, so all of this rain is running into the riverbeds," Hoppin said.

He added that while the Pajaro River takes a long time to rise, the San Lorenzo River, Soquel Creek, and Corralitos Creek rise rapidly during storms.