Earth ChangesS


Health

Turrialba Volcano erupts again - scientists warn of economic damage, increased health risks

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At 4:55 a.m. Sunday, ash spilled from the crater of Costa Rica's Turrialba Volcano for nearly an hour. Though the ash barely left the crater, located about 67 kilometer northeast of the capital San José, the wind carried it into the Central Valley — for the umpteenth time in recent months.

The eruption comes less than a week after the volcano shot a tower of ash 2.5 kilometers into the air, shutting down Juan Santamaría International Airport for the third time since March.

Since Turrialba Volcano re-awoke last October, volcanic ash has dirtied homes, damaged crops and mucked up travel plans. With its frequent eruptions, the volcano has gone from an interesting diversion to a nuisance for nearby residents and visitors.

And experts say the worst is yet to come.

Future eruptions, they say, could jeopardize the health of humans and the environment. They could also cause serious economic damage.

"There is a very high possibility that [the volcano] will reach a higher level of activity," said Lidier Esquivel, the chief investigator of risk management for the National Emergency Commission (CNE).

Scientists with both the Volcanological and Seismological Observatory of Costa Rica (OVSICORI) and the National Seismological Network (RSN) expect Turrialba's eruptions to gradually increase over the next few months until the volcano is erupting on a near weekly basis. Scientists have also confirmed that lava has reached the surface.

Light Saber

Over 8,000 dead, Adrian Hayes puts his climbing and hiking skills to use contacting remote villages in Nepal

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© Facebook: Adrian HayesHiker Adrian Hayes has been trekking to remote villages in Nepal and reporting back to aid agencies.
Poor weather and avalanches are continuing to prevent emergency workers from reaching remote villages, two weeks after a massive magnitude-7.8 earthquake devastated parts of Nepal. One man has been trekking in to remote villages and reporting his findings back to aid agencies since the earthquake struck on April 25.

"The highest village in Makalu region was around 4,000 metres and then down to around 2,000m," professional adventurer Adrian Hayes told ABC's PM via Skype from Nepal.

"[I was seeing] buildings with half their side gone, piles of rubble, some buildings ... some communities completely flattened."

He said that he was often the first person to get to some remote villages after the quake struck. The villagers told him of feeling helpless and said they did not expect to receive any help from their government for years, Mr Hayes said.

"Nepalese people are used to hardship. They live a hard life up there, so people were getting on and trying to rebuild," he said. "Things were getting going, but obviously nowhere near the amount of funding and sort of support that they need."

Mr Hayes has climbed Everest, K2 and many of Nepal's other mountains and spent eight years as a Gurkha officer. He was about 18 kilometres from the Everest Base Camp and due to climb the world's fourth and fifth highest mountains when the earthquake hit. He quickly changed his plans.

Comment: Good to see people of conscience stepping up when the universe places them in the right place at the right time.


Question

Seal seen 40 miles inland in Cambridgeshire, UK

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© Nathaniel Gore/PAThe sunbathing seal
A sunbathing seal has been spotted in a river 40 miles from the sea in Cambridgeshire.

Nathaniel Gore, 33, was out walking near his home in St Ives on Sunday when he spotted the animal splashing around in the water.

The editorial project manger stopped to film the seal and said it was not put off by the attention.

He added: "I've heard stories of seals being found inland before and he seemed perfectly happy so I wasn't too concerned.

"I stopped for about 20 minutes and he seemed to be enjoying the attention. He was splashing around in the water and sunbathing by the side of the river. I was able to get within three feet and it was a great sight to stop and enjoy."


Comment: Se also: Seal found 20 miles inland near St Helens, UK


Cloud Precipitation

Flash floods leave 8 dead in Afghanistan

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© BNAFlash floods in Faryab Province, Afghanistan, May 2015.
Afghanistan state news agency, Bakhtar News Agency (BNA) report that at least 7 people have been killed in flash floods in Faryab Province in the north of the country. Flash floods in Baghlan Province have killed 1 person and injured around 10 others.

Flash floods struck on 08 May 2015 in Faryab Province after a period of heavy rainfall. The districts of Garyzan, Pashtunkot and Belcheragh were worst affected. BNA report that at least 7 people were killed and over 1,500 homes damaged. The Faizabada-Takhar highway have been closed to traffic and wide areas of crops and orchards have suffered damaged.

Kuwaiti News Agency (KUNA) also report that flooding struck in the Baghlan-i-Markazi district of Baghlan province, where 1 person was killed and several injured early on Saturday 09 May 2015.

"There was heavy rain in Baghlan-e-Markazi district Friday evening and the people left their houses to safer areas. It was early Saturday when a flash flood hit the area and washed away more than 500 houses," district Governor Gohar Khan Babri told reporters in provincial capital Pul-e-Khumri, 160 km north of Kabul.

Cloud Precipitation

7 killed in flooding and landslides following 4 inches of rainfall in 24 hours, Southern China

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Flooding in China.
China's Ministry of Civil Affairs say that provinces in southern China have been affected by recent heavy rain, strong winds and hail. The heavy rain has caused flooding and landslides, leaving thousands displaced and several people dead.

In Hunan province, 28.5 million people have been affected by the bad weather. It is thought that at around 2 people have been killed in a landslide caused by the heavy rain in the province. Around 3,200 people were evacuated and more than 2,400 people needed emergency assistance. As many as 400 houses have collapsed and more than 4,600 have been damaged in the landslide and floods.

In Hubai province, 1,300 people have been evacuated after nearly 200 houses collapsed and more than 2,300 were damaged by heavy rain and floods. Over 500 have been evacuated after floods in Guizhou province.

Three people have been reported as drowned in flood water in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.

One person died in a lightning strike in Jiangxi province. Another victim was also killed by lightning in Gunagdong province, where around 1,900 people have been evacuated after more than 500 houses were damaged by the severe weather.

Parts of Sichuan province have also been affected by the floods and severe weather.

Attention

Animal weirdness: Wild boar drops through roof of store in Hong Kong

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Surprise: Wild boar gets trapped inside a children's clothing store
Shocked shoppers were given quite the surprise on Sunday when a wild boar fell through the ceiling of a children's clothing store.

The unusual customer had wandered into a Hong Kong shopping centre where it was then trapped and unable to get out.

Video aired by local TV stations showed the boar, which had apparently climbed up a ladder, punching a hole through the showroom's false ceiling with a trotter.


Comment: See also these similar reports:

Wild boar smashes up restaurant in South Korea

Wild boar crashes through glass panel into library in Malaysia

Wild boar creates havoc at Yonsei University, South Korea

More odd animal behaviour: Wild boar smashes into German hardware store


Cloud Lightning

Lightning strikes kill two in Tripura, India

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A school student and a woman were killed and five other people injured in lightning strikes in Tripura, official said here on Monday.

Alani Tripura, 12, a Class 6 student, and Sharmistha Debbarma, 42, were killed on the spot when lightnings struck them on Sunday in Longtharai Valley of the northern Tripura and Kalyanpur in western Tripura respectively.

An official of the disaster management centre here said several people were also injured in the lightning.

Rain, accompanied by high velocity winds, lightning and thunder, has been lashing Tripura since Sunday, damaging crops and uprooting electric poles and trees.

Source: IANS

Bizarro Earth

Mother's Day blizzard underway in South Dakota

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© South Dakota DOT/Handout/ReutersSnow covers the ground off Interstate 90 east of Sturgis, South Dakota, in this view from a highway camera taken Sunday.
Blizzard Warnings are in place for parts of South Dakota through 6:00 p.m. Sunday evening. Elsewhere Winter Storms Warnings are in effect that include the panhandle of Nebraska.

Area's in the panhandle, such as Chadron, could see more than a foot of the white stuff by the time all is said and done. Meanwhile, the Black Hills and Rapid City, SD could see up to two feet of snow! Winds are going to be whipping it around as well, they could see gusts near 60 mph.

This is a very late season storm, likely to break records. You'll remember back to the blizzard of October 2013 when western South Dakota and Nebraska panhandle picked up unprecedented snowfall. Some areas saw over four feet. The early season storm was to blame for weeks-long power outages and the deaths of millions of cattle and livestock. Our own Brad Sugden was working in the area at the time covering that blizzard.

Comment: A YouTuber posted the following video about the blizzard: "It's May...and last week it was in the 70's...today it's 30 and we have over a foot of snow!"







Attention

Experts warn Japan may have entered an era of great earthquakes and volcanic eruptions

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Mt. Fuji is located only about 25 kilometers from Mt. Hakone. While Mt. Fuji is also an active volcano, will the increased volcanic activity of Mt. Hakone have any effects on Mt. Fuji?

"The magma chambers located beneath Mt. Hakone and Mt. Fuji are not connected, so there is no effect on Mt. Fuji," said Toshitsugu Fujii, who chairs the Japan Meteorological Agency's Coordinating Committee for Prediction of Volcanic Eruptions. The agency has not observed any signs of impending eruption in Mt. Fuji and therefore has not raised the eruption alert level for the mountain.

However, since the magnitude-9.0 Great East Japan Earthquake occurred in March 2011, volcanoes in the country have shown signs of increased activity. Currently, a Level 2 eruption alert, which restricts access around the volcanic vent, is in effect for 10 volcanoes, while a Level 3 alert, which restricts approach to the volcano, has been issued for three volcanoes.

Comment: Earthquake and volcanic activity has been on the rise worldwide and experts are predicting that we can expect that to continue in the near future.


Attention

Dead Gray whale buried in Tijuana, Mexico

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© Xinhua/Eduardo Jaramillo/NOTIMEXWorkers bury a gray whale at the seashore of Playas de Tijuana, in Tijuana, northwest Mexico, May 7, 2015. The 15-meter and 14-ton gray whale was found dead here on Wednesday.

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© Xinhua/Eduardo Jaramillo/NOTIMEX