Earth ChangesS


Eye 2

Bullied into submission: 'I recant' says author of infamous Newsweek 'global cooling' article

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© Image via LinkedIn
The author of a much-quoted 1975 Newsweek article predicting catastrophic global cooling now says it was a big mistake and the earth was warming all along. (H/T Climate Depot)

Peter Gwynne, began his piece by declaring portentously:
"There are ominous signs that the earth's weather patterns have begun to change dramatically and that these changes may portend a drastic decline in food production - with serious political implications for just about every nation on earth."

Cloud Lightning

Four killed by lightning during unseasonal rain in Telangana, India

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Heavy rains coupled with gale winds that lashed several mandals of Warangal,Nizamabad districts in Telangana and East Godavari, Visakhapatnam and Vizianagaram districts in coastal AP and parts of Anantapur in Rayalaseema claimed four lives.

According to reports reaching here, four persons including a 20 year old woman died when lightning struck in many places of Warangal during the midnight hours of Monday till the wee hours of today.

Banoth Uma, Kambalapalli Thanda in Mahbubabad Mandal who is going to get married on 21 of this month died when the thunderbolt struck while she is trying to shift material related to the wedding ceremony from outside into her house.

Her mother is also hurt in the incident.

Question

Huge increase in rescued owl orphans baffles wildlife rescuers in Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom

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Owl stretching time: These baby tawny owls will be spending the Whitsun bank holiday at Tiggywinkles wildlife hospital in Buckinghamshire after being rescued by the workers there
* Staff at wildlife hospital in Haddenham, Buckinghamshire, have rescued 31 owls compared with just two last year

* Owner fears last year's storms causing trees to fall may be reason

* Orphans are aged between four days and two weeks

Britain's owl population is still suffering the consequences of last winter's wet and windy weather months later.

Staff at Tiggywinkles wildlife hospital in Haddenham, Buckinghamshire, have rescued 31 owls which had fallen from trees, compared with just two of the young birds of prey last year.

Les Stocker, Tiggywinkles founder, said: 'I am worried as last year we had just two owls in and this year we now have 31. Perhaps the storms taking out old trees might have something to do with it.

Attention

Perth beach closed after rotting whale head washes up on Australian shore

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Washed up: A decomposed whale head was found at Perth's Sorrento Beach on Monday morning
* Three metre whale head has washed up on Perth's Sorrento Beach

* Wildlife authorities believe the head belongs to a mature sperm whale

* Sorrento Beach remains closed amid fears sharks could be drawn in

A three metre decomposed whale head has washed up on a Perth beach, forcing authorities to close the area amid fears the carcass could attract sharks.

The head, believed to belong to a sperm whale, was found at Sorrento Beach on Monday morning.

The carcass is three metres long and 1.5m wide.


Comment: See also: Creatures from the deep signal major Earth Changes: Is anyone paying attention?


Attention

Alaska wildfire is bigger than Chicago

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© Sue Mann
A huge fire burning in Alaska's Kenai National Wildlife Refuge has exploded in size and now covers 243 square miles - an area bigger than the city of Chicago. The Funny River fire in the heavily forested reserve south of Anchorage is just 30% contained and authorities have ordered the evacuation of around 1,000 structures, the AP reports. The fire isn't unusually big by Alaska standards, a state spokeswoman says, but it is occurring much earlier in the year than usual; unusually dry conditions, accompanied by high winds, are helping the blaze to spread.

Some 900 people have been evacuated from an area near the city of Soldotna, and it's not clear whether they will have homes to return to when the fire is contained. "Living there, you have in the back of your mind it's one way in and one way out - and it's surrounded by forest," a 71-year-old resident who fled his home in a pickup truck carrying clothes, photos, and a trailer with two ATVs tells the Anchorage Daily News. "It's still not a good feeling when you're deciding what you can take, what you can't take, and what you may leave."

Cloud Lightning

60-year record for 24-hour rainfall in Roswell, New Mexico

Roswell flooding
Chavez County saw record rain totals this weekend as county officials estimate almost 4.5 inches fell there in less than 24 hours.

It's the most rain the area has received in a 24-hour span in almost 60 years.

The heavy rains flooded some homes and made some roads so impassable some drivers became stuck.

"About once a year we get good storms push through here like this," said Roswell resident Daniel Fuller.


Attention

3 missing in 2 miles wide, 4 miles long and 250 feet deep Colorado mudslide

colorado mudslide
© google mapsThe slide hit Sunday in a remote area near the town of Collbran, about 40 miles east of Grand Junction.
Three people were missing late Sunday in western Colorado after they were possibly caught in a large mudslide, according to officials.

The mudslide - estimated at 2 miles wide, 4 miles long and 250 feet deep - runs along Salt Creek Road near Vega State Park, east of Collbran, Colo., roughly 40 miles east of Grand Junction, according to the Mesa County Sheriff's Department.

"This slide is unbelievably big," Lt. Phil Stratton of the sheriff's office said in a statement.

Cow Skull

Cows, rice fields and big agriculture consumes well over 90% of California's water

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Low-flow shower heads help save much less water than people think.

California is experiencing a serious drought and the media is filled with recommendations about how to save water: Switch to dry landscaping; don't run water when you are shaving or brushing your teeth; install low­-flow shower­heads; and don't wash your car. All those ideas would help, but much less than people think. When I ask people to guess how much personal consumption accounts for water usage in California, people guess 20­-40%, which sounds reasonable; ­­­after all, there are 38 million people in California and they have lawns to water, teeth to brush, toilets to flush, cars to wash, and showers to take. But 20-­40% is not even close to being accurate.
  • ­­­According to a 2012 report by the Pacific Institute, only 4% of California's water is used by individuals
  • ­­­An astounding 93% of California's water goes to agriculture; and most of that 93% is misused or wasted

Cloud Lightning

19 dead, 7 missing in South China in 'once every 100 years' rainstorms

South China flooding
© XinhuaResidents go on the street after a flood subsided in Shitan Town of Qingyuan, south China's Guangdong Province, May 24, 2014.
At least 19 people have died and seven others remain missing after downpours hit provinces in south China, local authorities said on Sunday.

The rainstorms, the type that occur once every 100 years due to their ferocity, lashed Guangzhou, Zhaoqing and Qingyuan cities and caused floods, the collapse of houses and mud flows, said the provincial flood control and civil affairs authorities.

From 10 p.m. on Friday to 5 p.m. on Saturday, more than 140,000 people were affected, 21,000 were evacuated and 1,143 houses collapsed, said the provincial civil affairs department.

Comment: 'Once in 100 years' storms continue to be in the news with increasing frequency. Just recently Bosnia and Serbia experienced the worst flooding the area has seen in 120 years.

Bosnia, Serbia hit by worst flooding in 120 years


Arrow Up

Mass fish deaths continue: Millions have been found dead all over the world in the past month

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Millions of fish are suddenly dying all over the planet. In fact, there have been dozens of mass fish death events reported in the past month alone. So why is this happening? Why are fish dying in unprecedented numbers all over the world? When more than six tons of fish died in Marina Del Ray over the weekend, it made headlines all over the United States. But the truth is that what just happened off the southern California coast is just the tip of the iceberg. In 2014, mass fish die-offs have pretty much become a daily event globally.

Individually, each event could perhaps be dismissed as an anomaly, but as you will see below when they are all put together into one list it truly is rather stunning. So is there a reason why so many fish are dying? Is there something that connects these mass fish death events? Has something about our environment changed? The following are just a few examples of the mass fish death reports that have been coming in day after day from all over the globe...

Comment: Important clues on the why of this phenomena: Creatures from the deep signal major Earth Changes: Is anyone paying attention?