Earth ChangesS


Bizarro Earth

Hundreds of Rare Saiga Antelope Die in Kazakhstan (Again)

Saiga antelope at Zoo Keulen in Germany.
© Frank Wouters via FlickrSaiga antelope at Zoo Keulen in Germany.

One year after a mysterious epidemic wiped out 12,000 critically endangered saiga antelope (Saiga tatarica) in Kazakhstan, the ailment has struck there again, this time killing more than 400 animals.

Kazakhstan Today reports that 442 saiga antelope - including 360 does and 82 calves - were found dead in May. Like a year ago, they fell victim to pasteurellosis, an infection that afflicts the lungs.

But what caused the infection? West Kazakhstan regional governor Baktykozha Izmukhambetov told a cabinet meeting on May 31 that "some sort of poisoning from the flora, which is to say from the grass, is taking place." (Translation via Eurasianet.org)

Cloud Lightning

Best of the Web: Amazing waterspout 'tornadoes' caught on camera off Australia

Dramatic footage filmed from a helicopter by Australia's Channel 7 shows a series of powerful waterspouts near the coastal suburb of Terrigal, on Australia's New South Wales coast. Several powerful columns of swirling air could be seen blasting along the water's surface near the coastline. Channel 7 claimed the spouts reached heights of up to 600 metres (nearly two thousand feet), but dissipated as they neared land. The natural wonders came as strong winds and heavy rain also lashed other parts of the state, causing flash flooding and traffic chaos in Sydney.


Bizarro Earth

44-foot long sperm whale washes up on English beach

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© Unknown
Efforts were under way today to remove the body of a massive whale which died after being stranded on Redcar beach.

Work began after a post-mortem examination was carried out in a bid to establish what killed the gentle giant.

The 44-foot long male sperm whale was found washed up on the beach close to Green Lane by an early morning walker yesterday.

Extensive efforts were made to save the massive mammal but it later died.

Cow Skull

France on drought alert after hottest spring since 1900

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© Reuters/Régis DuvignauIn a wheatflied in western France last month
France is now on heatwave alert after the hottest spring since 1900 has left water tables down and farmers struggling to feed their livestock. The Health Ministry has put into effect level one of an anti-drought plan that was drawn up after 15,000 people died in the long-hot summer of 2003.

Summer 2011 could be drier than summer 1973, when drought cost the economy an estimated 15 billion euros and a "drought tax" was introduced to raise 900 million euros to make up farmers' losses, according to weather forecasters.

Spring this year has been the hottest since at last 1900 and the driest for 50 years. Temperatures have been 2.6°C higher than the average between 1971 and 2000.

Over half of the country's départements are already limiting the use of water and farmers have already been promised millions of euros of aid.

The price of straw has been fixed at no higher than25 euros a tonne, Agriculture Minister Bruno Le Maire announced Tuesday.

Bizarro Earth

Chile: Earthquake Magnitude 6.2 - near Bio-Bio

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© USGS
Date-Time:
Wednesday, June 01, 2011 at 12:55:21 UTC

Wednesday, June 01, 2011 at 08:55:21 AM at epicenter

Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones

Location:
37.545°S, 73.663°W

Depth:
15.1 km (9.4 miles)

Region:
OFFSHORE BIO-BIO, CHILE

Distances:
7 km (4 miles) N of Lebu, Bio-Bio, Chile

96 km (59 miles) SW of Concepcion, Bio-Bio, Chile

116 km (72 miles) W of Los Angeles, Bio-Bio, Chile

530 km (329 miles) SSW of SANTIAGO, Region Metropolitana, Chile

Sheeple

Saudi Arabia: Mystery Disease Kills 300 Sheep Within an Hour

A Saudi farmer who went into his barn to take his 300 sheep on their daily pasturing was shocked when he found them all dead, a newspaper in the Gulf Kingdom said on Saturday.

The farm said he checked the sheep an hour earlier and they were all alive in their barn at his far in the western town of Qunfudha.

The unnamed farmer had owned the sheep for years and they were his sole source of living for his family of 16.

Attention

US Idaho: Floods May Cause Mosquito Explosion, West Nile Danger

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© Unknown
Pocatello - The rain and the lowland flooding are causing another problem: stagnant water perfect for breeding mosquitoes. As the weather warms up, mosquitoes this year have the potential of infecting more people with dangerous West Nile virus than in past years.

"I don't know if we want to say it's something to be scared about, but it's something to definitely be concerned about. Because it's something you have to be aware of, and you have to take some steps yourself to prevent yourself from picking it up," Southeast Idaho Health Department epidemiologist Jeff Doerr said.

Bannock County mosquito abatement crews are already out in the field, trying to treat as many potential mosquito habitats as they can. But they have their work cut out for them, it seems like there's standing water just about everywhere.

Better Earth

US: 10,000 Evacuated in North Dakota

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© Joana Roja/FlickrThe Souris (or Mouse) River is a small plains river that starts in Saskatchewan, Canada, and returns to Canada in Manitoba, flowing into the Assiniboine River. The Souris makes a deep U-shape as it meanders through North Dakota.
Residents flee rising Souris; Burlington braces for Des Lacs blast

An estimated 10,000 Minot residents began a hectic scramble Tuesday to move their belongings out of their homes and seek shelter elsewhere, while crews began an all-night effort to build new, secondary dikes throughout the city.

Many were told at noon Tuesday that they'd have to be out of their residences by dark. Others were given a deadline of today. Minot Mayor Curt Zimbelman made the announcement at City Hall.

"We have to take extreme measures. The water is on the ground now. We know what to expect. It's not a good situation," said Zimbelman.

Residents of all nine evacuations zones in Minot were told they would have to get out of harm's way as soon as possible. In the meantime the city officials, U. S. Army Corps of Engineers and the North Dakota National Guard continued to devise a plan on how to best defend Minot against what is on track to become the greatest flood in this city's history.

The Souris River has been testing the city's defenses all spring. Now, fueled by up to four inches of rain from Minot to Kenmare and beyond, the Des Lacs River is rolling and about to play a major role in the fate of many valley residents. The Des Lacs, which joins the Souris River at Burlington, was on pace Tuesday to seriously challenge its all-time top flow.

Bizarro Earth

Volcano Expert Fears We'll See a Super Eruption

Blast Radius
© The Extinction ProtocolBlast radius of a Yellowstone super-volcano eruption in the U.S.

Volcanologist Clive Oppenheimer yesterday warned there was a one-in-500 chance of the world being hit by a super- volcano this century.

The reader in vulcanology at Cambridge University told a Hay audience: "That might not sound like much, but it is a lot more likely than an asteroid impact.

"The events in Japan remind us that you can have a tsunami and earthquake and a nuclear plant there as well and you can have these chain reaction events that are actually quite calamitous and they are not unimaginable."

Examining geological, historical and archeological records, the expert took the audience on a journey back to three volcanic eruptions that have shaken the world - the 1815 Tambora volcano in Indonesia that killed 100,000 people, the 1783 eruption of Kaki in Iceland and the massive Toba eruption in indonesia that pumped 3,000 cubic km of magma into the atmosphere around 75,000 years ago, leaving behind a lake-filled crater in North Sumatra 100km long and 30km wide.

Bizarro Earth

US: More rain, snow, National Guard troops for Montana

Missouri river
© Associated PressRising water from the Missouri river laps up against sandbags placed around a home in Fort Pierre, S.D., on Sunday.
The governor of flood-plagued Montana ordered more National Guard troops to join the anti-flood effort, while states downstream along the bloated Missouri River strengthened levees and laid sandbags ahead of the release of waters from dams and reservoirs.

More rain fell Sunday on soaked Montana communities after more than a week of floods in the region, with the National Weather Service predicting up to 3 inches before it tapers off Monday. Previous storms brought as much as 8 inches to some areas of the state.

For the second straight weekend, forecasters blanketed much of the central and eastern regions of Montana with flood warnings.

Gov. Brian Schweitzer Sunday sent 36 National Guard soldiers to Roundup, a town northwest of Billings in central Montana that remained inundated by several feet of water for a fourth day.