Earth ChangesS


Wolf

Russia: Wolves Attack People in Karelian Town

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© AFP/ David Ebener
A pack of wolves terrorized locals in the streets of a Karelian town, not returning to the woods until police opened fire, killing two.

The incident took place on Monday in Pitkyaranta, a town of 12,000 located near the Finnish border, some 670 kilometers northeast of Moscow, local police reported.

"A frightened man called police to report he had just been attacked by wolves...not in the woods, but on the city's Parkovaya Ulitsa," a police spokesman said.

A police patrol dispatched to Parkovaya Ulitsa discovered several wolves waiting outside the door of an apartment building. The animals ignored the police car, but one of them charged when the officers left the vehicle. They shot the wolf and then another who also tried to attack, prompting the pack to trudge back toward the forest where it came from.

The thermometer stood at moderate minus 12 degrees Celsius in Pitkyaranta on Monday, down some six degrees from last week's average, according to Gismeteo.ru weather forecaster.

Comment: See these also: Wolves Likely to Spread Across Germany

Wolves return to Moldova for first time in 40 years

And this from Russia one year ago: 'Super pack' of 400 wolves terrorise remote Russian town after killing 30 horses in just four days


Cow Skull

Food Crisis as Drought and Cold Hit Mexico

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© Alejandro Bringas/European Pressphoto AgencyIndigenous Tarahumara drove to another community to receive humanitarian aid in the midst of a drought.
A drought that a government official called the most severe Mexico had ever faced has left two million people without access to water and, coupled with a cold snap, has devastated cropland in nearly half of the country.

The government in the past week has authorized $2.63 billion in aid, including potable water, food and temporary jobs for the most affected areas, rural communities in 19 of Mexico's 31 states. But officials warned that no serious relief was expected for at least another five months, when the rainy season typically begins in earnest.

While the authorities say they expect the situation to worsen, one of the five worst-affected states, Zacatecas, got a reprieve on Sunday. Heriberto Félix Guerra, head of the Ministry of Social Development, saw the rain, the first in 17 months, as a guardedly reassuring sign.

Bizarro Earth

Scientists worry US Alaska volcano, 'Cleveland', could blow soon

Scientists in Alaska are worried that a massive volcano on a remote island about a thousand miles southwest of Anchorage is primed to erupt and spew a giant ash plume that could paralyze intercontinental travel.

The Alaska Volcano Observatory on Tuesday bumped the alert status for the Cleveland Volcano from yellow to orange - one step below the highest alert level.
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© Kym Yano/APAlaskan scientists have raised the alert level for Cleveland Volcano to Orange from Yellow.
"Renewed eruptive activity of Cleveland Volcano has been observed in satellite data," the observatory said, noting that a new 130-foot lava dome - a visible bulge of gathering lava - had formed in the mountaintop's crater.

The group said there have been "no observations" of explosive activity, but cautioned it "remains possible for intermittent, sudden explosions of blocks and ash to occur at any time, and ash clouds exceeding 20,000 feet above sea level."

Igloo

Serbia: 11,000 Trapped in Remote Villages by Snow

Ice Age_1
© AP Photo/Vadim GhirdaA woman looks out of a window covered in frost on a bus in Bucharest, Romania, Thursday, Feb. 2, 2012. At least 11,000 villagers have been trapped by heavy snow and blizzards in Serbia's mountains, authorities said Thursday, as the death toll from Eastern Europe's weeklong deep freeze rose to 122, many of them homeless people.
Belgrade - At least 11,000 villagers have been trapped by heavy snow and blizzards in Serbia's mountains, authorities said Thursday, as the death toll from Eastern Europe's weeklong deep freeze rose to 122, many of them homeless people.

The harshest winter in decades has seen temperatures in some regions dropping to minus 30 C (minus 22 F) and below, and has caused power outages, traffic chaos and the widespread closure of schools, nurseries and airports.

The stranded in Serbia are stuck in some 6,500 homes in remote areas that cannot be reached due to icy, snow-clogged roads with banks reaching up to 5 meters (16 feet). Emergency crews were pressing hard to try to clear the snow to deliver badly needed supplies, and helicopters were dispatched to some particularly remote areas in Serbia and neighboring Bosnia.

On Bosnia's Mt. Romanija, near Sarajevo, a chopper thumped down in the small hamlet of Ozerkovici, where a single nun lives in a Serb Christian Orthodox monastery surrounded by just a few village residents.

Wrapped tight in a black jacket and a scarf, Sister Justina greeted aid workers at her monastery: "I live alone here," she said, but noted "God will help me."

In Serbia, relief efforts are concentrated on evacuating the sick, on food delivery and gasoline distribution.

"We are trying everything to unblock the roads since more snow and blizzards are expected in the coming days," Serbian emergency police official Predrag Maric told The Associated Press.

Cloud Lightning

US: Severe Storms Set to Ignite Across Oklahoma, Texas

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© AccuWeatherThe severe weather risk includes the potential for a few tornadoes as well.
Severe thunderstorms will erupt across parts of Oklahoma and Texas starting late today. The risk of damaging storms will progress eastward Friday and into the weekend.

A storm system will slowly push onto the southern Plains from the Rockies, setting up powerful and potentially destructive thunderstorms toward evening.

The main threats with these storms will be large hail, high winds and flash flooding. However, there is the potential for a few tornadoes, especially after dark.

On the cold side of the storm, heavy snow and strong winds will produce a blizzard in portions of Colorado, Nebraska and Kansas. On the warm side, damaging severe thunderstorms will roll across west-central Texas and west-central Oklahoma.

Igloo

160 die as Eastern Europe sinks further into deep freeze

A cold snap kept Europe in its icy grip on Thursday, pushing the death toll to 160 as countries from Italy to Ukraine struggled to cope with temperatures that plunged to record lows in some places.

Nine more people died in Poland overnight as temperatures hit minus 32 Celsius (minus 25.6 Fahrenheit) in the southwest, bringing the overall toll to 29 since the deep freeze began last week, national police said.
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© AFP, Sasa DjordjevicA man walks along a snow covered street in the southeastern Serbian town of Medvedja
In Ukraine, tens of thousands of people have headed to shelters trying to escape the freeze that the emergencies ministry said has now killed 63 people.

Most of them literally froze to death on the street, with only a handful making it to hospital before succumbing to hypothermia, the ministry said.

Shivering and hungry, tens of thousands of Ukrainians have sought help in the more than 2,000 temporary shelters set up by the authorities to help the poor survive the fearsome spell of cold weather.

The shelters offer warmth and hot food in a country where temperatures fell to minus 33 degrees Celsius in the Carpathians in the west of the country and minus 27 in the capital Kiev.

Igloo

Isolated winter: Western Canada struggling with record snow-fall as rest of country goes dry

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© Unknown
Snowfall and snow levels are reaching record levels in Alberta and British Columbia in Western Canada. While many other parts of North America are still struggling to fully open all their lifts and runs for winter2011-12 during an unusually dry winter, the West of Canada has been deluged fairly consistently since last autumn. "This month goes down as one of the snowiest January's on record. There is unbelievable snow conditions at both Fernie and Kicking Horse with total snowfall at both over 19 feet now. Today alone, Fernie has seen over a foot overnight!!" said an excited Matt Mosteller of Resorts of the Canadian Rockies which runs the two centres.

Meanwhile a little to the east and north, over the border in Alberta, with over three months left to go in the ski season, Marmot Basin near Jasper has already received over 12 feet (372 cm) of snowfall which is 93% of its annual average. If the next three months produce even typical amounts of snowfall, Marmot Basin will exceed its all time snowfall record of 529 cm set way back in 1965.

Igloo

Prefecture of Japan pleads for help after being hit with record snow-fall

The prefecture of Niigata, Japan, has asked for a dispatch of troops to help in the wake of record-setting snowfalls, according to reports on Wednesday. 3 people have died in the northern part of Japan from avalanches in Akita. The Ground Self-Defense Force of Japan was expected to send troops to the town of Uonuma, where a snow depth of 4.09 meters, or 13.4 feet, has reportedly built up. Fearing roof collapse under the weight of the deep snow, complicated by warming and the potential for rain, the local officials called for the troops to help clear roofs. Niigata is in western Honshu, which winter climate is notorious for its waves of heavy snow off the Sea of Japan during cold outbreaks.
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© Unknown

Bizarro Earth

Vanuatu: Earthquake Magnitude 7.1 - West of Efate

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© USGS
Date-Time:
Thursday, February 02, 2012 at 13:34:38 UTC

Friday, February 03, 2012 at 12:34:38 AM at epicenter

Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones

Location:
17.810°S, 167.149°E

Depth:
10.1 km (6.3 miles)

Region:
VANUATU

Distances:
124 km (77 miles) W of PORT-VILA, Efate, Vanuatu

251 km (155 miles) S of Luganville, Espiritu Santo, Vanuatu

294 km (182 miles) NW of Isangel, Tanna, Vanuatu

1803 km (1120 miles) ENE of BRISBANE, Queensland, Australia

Nuke

US: San Onofre Nuclear Plant Closed After Radiation Leak

San Onofre Nuke plant
© Lenny Ignelzi/AP Photo
A small quantity of radioactive gas leaked inside one of the buildings at San Onofre nuclear power plant north of San Diego, according to a spokesman for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

The spokesman said the radiation levels were "barely measurable," but the plant was shut down as a precaution.

"At no point were the public or our workers in any danger," Southern California Edison spokesman Gil Alexander told ABC News.

Officials say the radiation leak likely occurred in the steam generator tubes of San Onofre's reactor #3. The steam system, which is supposed to be shielded from exposure to radiation, was replaced in December 2010. Alexander said plant officials will be conducting an investigation into why the new steam tubes leaked.

Gary Headrick is part of the environmental group San Clemente Green and lives just eight miles away from San Onofre.