Earth ChangesS


Cloud Lightning

Tornado Myths Debunked

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© Don Kausler/The Birmingham News/Associated PressA funnel cloud approaches Tuscaloosa, Ala., where widespread damage and multiple deaths occurred from the storm on April 27.
It's been a bad year for tornadoes, no doubt about it. By the latest count, they've claimed more than 480 lives across the country, the most since 519 died in 1953 - decades before the advent of Doppler radar and early warning systems.

And no matter where twisters touch down - from Mapleton, Ia., to Joplin, Mo. - they leave a strange new reality in their wake. But reality has little to do with some of the ideas that have swirled up around them over the years. Here's a look at the most common myths and the truth behind them.

Binoculars

US: 1,600-plus Florida Beachgoers Stung by Jellyfish, County Officials Say

jellyfish
A swarm of purplish, stinging jellyfish is washed up on Cocoa Beach, Florida, on Saturday.
More than 1,600 people within a 10-mile stretch of central Florida's Atlantic beaches have been stung in the past week by a distinctive species of jellyfish not indigenous to North America, a rescue official said Tuesday.

Brevard County Ocean Rescue officials said they began flying warning flags at beaches from Cocoa Beach to Cape Canaveral last Tuesday, indicating either a medium or high hazard, along with another flag indicating dangerous marine life.

"From last Wednesday to Friday, we got about 600 reports. Saturday to (Tuesday), we got another thousand," Chief Jeff Scabarozi said.

Magic Hat

A collection of sinkhole images from around the world

sinkhole
Powerful thunderstorms and widespread flooding caused this sinkhole to open up in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Sun

Warmest British Spring Since 1659

The London Eye
© ReutersThe London Eye rises above daffodils blooming in the sun in London.
It might come as a surprise to those who tried to hold a barbecue in the rain yesterday, but this spring has been the warmest since records began more than 350 years ago.

The average temperature since March for central England - the triangular area between London, Manchester and Bristol - was 50.58F (10.32C).

Weather statistics dating back to 1659 show the previous warmest spring was in 1893, the year that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle announced the death of Sherlock Holmes. The temperature then averaged 50.36F (10.2C).

Attention

A Rare Eclipse of the Midnight Sun

It sounds like an oxymoron: a solar eclipse at midnight.

According to NASA, it's about to happen.

"It might sound like a contradiction to have a solar eclipse in the middle of the night, but this is what we will see in northern Norway, Sweden and Finland on June 1st," says Knut Joergen Roed Oedegaard, an astrophysicist at the Norwegian Centre for Science Education in Oslo.

Midnight Eclipse
© NASAA previous "midnight Sun" eclipse photographed by Oddleiv Skilbrei in northern Sweden on July 31, 2000. The eclipse of June 1, 2011, will be more than twice as deep.
At this time of year, he explains, the sun doesn't set in Arctic parts of the world, so a solar eclipse is theoretically possible at all hours of the day. When the clock strikes local midnight in northern Norway at the end of June 1st, about half of the lingering sun will be covered by the Moon.

"The eclipse can also be seen from Siberia, northern China, remote parts of Alaska and Canada, and Iceland," writes Fred Espenak of the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, where the eclipse circumstances were calculated. "Greatest eclipse occurs at 21:16 Universal Time on June 1st. At that time, an eclipse of magnitude 0.601 will be visible from the Arctic coast of western Siberia as the midnight sun skirts the northern horizon."

Info

And The Moon Is Eclipsed By The Earth

Lunar Eclipse
© Jason MajorThe Moon grows dark during a total lunar eclipse on December 21, 2010.
On June 15 there will be a total lunar eclipse visible from Australia, Indonesia, southern Japan, India, a large area of Asia, Africa, Europe and the eastern part of South America. This is expected to be one of the darkest eclipses ever (with a magnitude of 1.7), second only to the July 2000 eclipse.

Sadly it won't be visible to viewers in North America, but much of the rest of the world should be treated to a wonderful show as the Moon slips into Earth's shadow. Gradually growing darker from its western limb inwards, the Moon then gains a bluish cast which transitions to orange then deep red as it moves into light passing through the edge of Earth's atmosphere (the same as what makes the colors of a sunset) and then eventually going almost completely dark before the process then reverses itself from the opposite side.

The entire eclipse will last 5 hours and 39 minutes, with a totality duration of 1 hour and 40 minutes. It will begin at 17:23 UT.

Bizarro Earth

800-Mile-Wide Hot Anomaly Found Under Seafloor off Hawaii

Hot lava spills into the sea
© Patrick McFeeley, National GeographicHot lava spills into the sea from under a hardened lava crust on the Big Island of Hawaii.
Hawaii's traditional birth story - that the volcanic islands were, and are, fueled by a hot-rock plume running directly to Earth's scorching core - could be toast, a new study hints.

(See pictures of a recent eruption Hawaii's Kilauea volcano.)

Scientists say they've found solid evidence of a giant mass of hot rock under the seafloor in the region. But it's not a plume running straight from the core to the surface - and it's hundreds of miles west of the nearest Hawaiian island.

Until now, the researchers say, good seismic data on the region has been scarce, so it was tough to question the traditional explanation: that a stream of hot rock directly from around Earth's core formed the 3,100-mile-long (5,000-kilometer-long) chain of islands and undersea mountains in the Pacific Ocean.

Snowman

Best of the Web: Eminent geophysicist rejects global warming theory, says world on verge of 'mini ice age'

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© NASASunspot activity since 1990
An eminent Mexican geophysicist says that despite predictions of global warming based on computer models, the world may be on the verge of an eighty-year cold period similar to the "little ice age" experienced by Europe from 1300 to 1800 A.D..

Víctor Manuel Velasco, of the University of Mexico's Institute of Geophysics, says that recent winter conditions are similar to those of the "little ice age", and in particular the "Maunder Minimum," a period during which sunspot activity dropped significantly. He also notes that the Earth is in a similar position today in relation to the rest of the solar system, a fact which he regards as significant for climate.

"We are talking about the period between 1645 and 1715, which is known as the Maunder Minimum, a period in which the sunspots practically disappeared from the surface of the sun, and in which our planet occupied a position similar to which it has today, with respect to the center of gravity of our [solar] system." Velasco said in an interview published by the university.

Bad Guys

US Will Be Left in Ruins, As More Disasters Are in Store? FEMA Warns Disaster-Relief Fund is Running Low

The federal government could run out of money to help communities such as Joplin, Mo., rebuild from devastating tornadoes and flooding.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has $2.4 billion in its Disaster Relief Fund to last through Sept. 30 and is seeking $1.8 billion for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1. Lawmakers from both parties say those sums are not enough to pay for the billions in damage caused by the extraordinary string of weather disasters.

"FEMA will have to stop recovery efforts in 50 states in the spring of 2012" without additional money, Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., wrote in a letter to her colleagues. She heads the Senate panel that oversees FEMA finances.

The administration acknowledged Thursday that FEMA could run out of disaster-relief money. "That will depend on the summer storm season and other factors," said Meg Reilly, spokeswoman for the Office of Management and Budget.

FEMA Chief Financial Officer Norm Dong said the $2.4 billion will pay for "lifesaving and life-sustaining efforts" in heavily damaged areas by helping people get food, shelter and clothing.

Attention

US: 2011 Now Deadliest Year for Tornadoes in Recorded History

Kevin Chew
© Joe Raedle / Getty ImagesKevin Chew prays by his father's casket Saturday in Seneca, Mo. Raymond Chew Sr., 66, died of injuries sustained in the tornado.
The death toll from the monster tornado last week in Missouri has risen to at least 139. Joplin City Manager Mark Rohr said Saturday during a news conference that the death toll rose to at least 142, but later revised that figure down without elaboration.

That makes this the deadliest year for tornadoes since 1953, based on an assessment of figures from the National Weather Service.

If the death toll does stand at 139, it would place this year's tornado death toll at 520. Until now, the highest recorded death toll in a single year was 519 in 1953.