Earth ChangesS

Bandaid

US: Heavy Rains Prove Too Much for Missouri's Platte County Levees


It was the day that many residents in the northwest corner of Platte County were fearing, after heavy rains overnight proved to be the final straw for levees already struggling to hold back the flooded Missouri River.

Waters from a broken levee washed through the town of Rushville, Missouri, across the river from Atchison, Kansas, after an inch-and-a-half of rain overnight. Rushville resident Diana Stanton and her brothers spent Monday working to save their nearly-century old farmhouse.

"We've been hanging on by our teeth last night. We had an inch and half of rain here, the big storm, so we knew this morning we were going to have problems," said Stanton, who spent the day pulling up carpets and cleaning out furniture.

Brother Keith Stanton says that last week they laid out sandbags to stop the rising water, but it wasn't enough.

"We probably laid 30,000 sand bags," he said.

At nearby Sugar Lake, the water is rising fast. Area resident Tammy Christgen and her family emptied their house on the front lawn on Monday, as trucks haul belongings to higher ground. But Christgen says that they will be back.

Cloud Lightning

US: Rowan University Grad Reports on Devastating Floods in Midwest

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© Photo by Rich Wisniewski/KMOT-TVFloodwaters inundate a street in Burlington, N.D., a town a mile east of Minot. Burlington was one of the first towns to get hit by the historic floods in North Dakota, according to Rich Wisniewski, a Gloucester County native who works for a TV station in Minot.
One hundred fifty-eight.

Up until recently, that's all Minot, North Dakota, was to Rich Wisniewski. A number.

For about eight years, he'd wanted to be a TV reporter, so, following the advice of his boss at NBC 10 in Bala Cynwyd - where he'd been interning for a year and a half - Wisniewski last year Googled the top 210 television markets in the country, started at 150, and worked his way down through Montana, Wyoming, upstate New York, Florida.

KMOT-TV, the Minot-Bismarck-Dickinson market that ranked 158, was just one of 70 small market stations Wisniewski, a Rowan University graduate, sent his rรฉsumรฉ tape to.

Today, seven months after KMOT hired him, Minot is Wisniewski's adopted home.

He watched last week as the worst flooding in the city's history swept through town, swallowing up homes, streets and businesses. He watched, not with the cool, detached eye of someone paid to cover and report the news, but as a resident of the ravaged town, as a neighbor, as a person.

Gear

Africa: More Global Warming Propaganda -The Atmosphere is Saturated

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© Barbara JonesOpen Billed Storks at Sunset, Botswana, Africa
The atmosphere is so saturated with green gases that even if the all the world's automobiles were parked and industrial activity stopped, it would hardly make a dint

The former Director of Meteorological Services, David Lesolle, told Mmegi in an interview this week that climate change is manifesting itself in climate variability and excessive rainfall that came even in winter, making its utilisation difficult.

Lesolle said though the developing countries are adversely affected by this climate change phenomenon, they are not its cause. Developed countries caused it. He said, "We cannot stop climate change but adapt it. We can only stop our emissions."


Comment: While it is true that the climate is changing and will have devastating consequences for societies, greenhouse emissions have little to do with this. For a more realistic assessment of what's going on here on the BBM read Forget About Global Warming: We're One Step From Extinction!

He said signs of the vulnerability of developing countries in Africa happened a few years ago when the cyclones occurred in Madagascar and the Indian Ocean. This was in 2000 when the Eline cyclone brought vast rainfalls into Botswana and South Africa where dams were filled beyond capacity. Both countries opened their dams so that their walls would not be damaged. The excessive waters flowed into Mozambique.

Cloud Lightning

India: Monsoon rains 89 pc above normal in Uttar Pradesh

Uttar Pradesh got a break from five days of continuous heavy rains on Friday. Though light to moderate intermittent rains were reported from many parts of the state, the intensity has decreased. While total rains in the monsoon so far have been 89 per cent above normal, incessant rains have also claimed 18 lives so far, including three more deaths in a house collapse incident in Kanpur on Friday. The weatherman has predicted low rainfall activity for the next 2-3 days. The monsoon, however, will revive again from July 4-5.

According to the monsoon assessment report of UP MET department, the monsoon arrived in UP on June 17, two days behind schedule, but has given ample rains so far. The per district average rainfall in the state between June 1-30 was 170 mm against the normal of 89.8 mm, which was 89 per cent above normal. The west UP received more rains in comparison to the east. The average per district rainfall in west UP was 168.1 mm against the normal of 58.1 mm, which was 147 per cent above normal. In east UP, the average per district rainfall was 117.2 mm, 64 per cent higher than normal 104.1 mm. In Lucknow, the rainfall in the same period was 47 per cent.

Cloud Lightning

Tropical Storm Arlene deluges Mexico

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NOAA satellite image taken Wednesday at 1:45 a.m. ET
Veracruz, Mexico - The Atlantic season's first tropical storm hit Mexico's Central Gulf Coast yesterday, hurling heavy rains over a wide swath.

The heart of Tropical Storm Arlene struck land near Cabo Rojo, a cape just off the mainland between the cities of Tampico and Tuxpan. It had maximum sustained winds of 65 miles per hour and was moving inland at 8 miles per hour, said the US National Hurricane Center in Miami.

Coastal towns appear to have escaped serious damage from the initial storm. Tree branches fell, water accumulated on some streets, and a neighborhood of Tuxpan lost electricity, civil protection authorities reported.

Cloud Lightning

Bangladesh: More rains ahead

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Heavy rains, caused by the active monsoon at different parts of the country, may prolong for one or two days more.

Bazlur Rashid, an official at the Met Office, told bdnews24.com on Friday that the active southwestern monsoon had created deep clouds over the North Bay.

The country's coastal areas, he said, might be affected by heavy winds due to the deep clouds.

The maritime ports of Chittagong, Cox's Bazar and Mongla were advised to keep hoisted local cautionary signal No 3.

Fishing boats and trawlers plying the North Bay were also advised to move cautiously until further instructions.

It is feared that tidal waves, surging 1-3 feet higher than usual ones due to the southwestern monsoon and the appearance of the new moon, could flood the coastal areas of Cox's Bazar, Chittagong, Noakhali, Feni, Lakshmipur, Chandpur, Comilla, Bhola, Barisal, Patuakhali, Barguna, Pirojpur, Jhalakati, Bagerhat, Khulna, Satkhira, and adjacent islands and chars, Rashid said.

Cloud Lightning

U.S.: Storm pounds Chicago area with hail, causes power outages

Violent storms pelted the area with rain and golf ball-sized hail Thursday night, leaving more than 100,000 ComEd customers without power.

The "supercell" storm hit shortly after 9 p.m. The south suburbs had about 56,000 ComEd customers without electricity. About 16,000 customers did not have power in Chicago and near west suburbs.

The severe storm collapsed part of the roof at the conference center at Illinios Beach State Park and felled trees and snapped utility poles, knocking out power in Waukegan, Beach Park, Zion and Winthrop Harbor and as far north as Racine.

Bizarro Earth

Stunning Noctilucent Clouds Shine Brightly in the UK

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© Stu AtkinsonPanoramic view of Noctilucent Clouds from Kendal Castle in the UK.
Mysterious "night shining" or Noctilucent Clouds are beautiful to behold, and here are some gorgeous examples what skywatchers in the UK have been experiencing. Stu Atkinson took this stunning panoramic view from Kendal Castle. (Click image for access to a larger version). NLCs are usually seen during the summertime, appearing at sunset. They are thin, wavy ice clouds that form at very high altitudes and reflect sunlight long after the Sun has dropped below the horizon. Scientists don't know exactly why they form, and they seem to be appearing more and more in recent times.

Science writer Will Gater also had a great view of NLCs this morning. Click here to see his animation, or see more of his images and animations at his website post.

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© Will GaterNLCs seen over the UK on July 1, 2011.

Bizarro Earth

US: Heat index could hit 'dangerous levels' for 4th of July weekend

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© Bob Chamberlin / Los Angeles TimesA woman uses an umbrella to get some relief from the heat next to city hall Thursday afternoon. Friday's temperatures are expected to climb reaching triple digits in the valley areas.
As the Fourth of July weekend approaches, weather forecasters are predicting that hot weather will hit the Southern California, with the heat index possibly approaching "dangerous levels," according to a statement from the National Weather Service.

Although temperatures along the coast are expected to be a few degrees above normal, inland temperatures will see the greatest increase, warming five to 15 degrees above normal, weather service officials said.

Temperatures for some locations in the Antelope Valley and San Fernando Valley were expected to hit or top the 100-degree mark, with daytime highs ranging between 100 and 110 degrees, according to weather service predictions. Some interior coastal foothill locations, such as the Hollywood Hills, might see temperatures top out in the 90s, forecasters said.

Cloud Lightning

US: Arizona residents affected by fires brace for floods

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© Josh Radtke/The Arizona RepublicWorkers reinforce a water-diversion canal along Campbell Road in Flagstaff on Wednesday. Last year, the Schultz Fire left the eastern slopes of the San Francisco Peaks barren and prone to flash flooding.
While wildfires in Arizona this year have been destructive - charring nearly 1 million acres and destroying nearly 90 homes - they have not been deadly.

But the potential for tragedy and loss does not end when the flames are extinguished and wildland firefighters move on to battle their next blaze.

Last year, 12-year-old Shaelyn Wilson died not from the Schultz Fire, which burned more than 15,000 acres near Flagstaff, but from the flooding that tore through the burned-out area after a monsoon storm dropped an inch of rain in about 15 minutes nearly three weeks after the fire was contained.