Earth Changes
Total insured losses from natural catastrophes and man-made disasters reached about $70 billion in the first half of this year, more than double the losses in the same period in 2010, according to estimates by the Zurich-based reinsurer.
The figure was only surpassed in 2005 after hurricanes Katrina, Wilma and Rita caused claims of more than $90 billion, the world's second-biggest reinsurer said. Catastrophe claims usually increase in the second half of the year with the hurricane season in the North Atlantic and typhoons in the northwest Pacific.
Earth's coral reefs have not been faring well in recent decades, facing multiple threats from pollution, disease, elevated water temperatures, and overfishing. Often referred to as the "rainforests of the Sea," coral reefs support a wide variety of marine life, help protect shorelines, and contribute significantly to tourism and the fishing industry. A new study looks at a rare but catastrophic impact on reefs: the damage caused by natural disasters such as an earthquakes.
In May of 2009, a powerful, magnitude-7.3 earthquake shook the western Caribbean, causing lagoonal reefs in Belize, 213 kilometers (132 miles) from the epicenter, to avalanche and slide into deeper water. As reported in a preprint article of Ecology, a journal of the Ecological Society of America, Richard Aronson of the Florida Institute of Technology and colleagues analyzed data that suggest how the history of the reef will influence its recovery.
During the quarter-century before the earthquake struck, the reefs had gone through mass mortalities of two sequentially dominant coral species. Novel events in their own right, these mass mortalities were instantly "rendered moot" on half the reefs, which were destroyed when the earthquake hit.
Aronson and colleagues' work focused on a 375-square-kilometer (144-square-mile) area of the Belizean Barrier Reef, which they monitored from 1986 to 2009. The group revisited 21 sites in 2010 to determine the impacts of the earthquake. They found that approximately half the reef slopes had slabbed off and slid into deeper water. Only sediment and the skeletal debris of corals remained.
The Met Office has issued a severe weather warning for most of the UK, advising those in the North as well as Scotland, to expect winds of up to 75mph.
In Ireland, MET Éireann has also forecast strong southwest winds reaching speeds of 50 to 80 km/hr, gusting 90 to 130 km/hr, with the most severe winds affecting exposed regions of Connacht and Ulster on Monday morning.
Thomas Viot, 30, was bitten on the leg by what he believed was a tiger shark as he kite-surfed near a reef off the capital, Port Moresby, 1,000 miles from the northern Australian city of Darwin.
Despite a wound that went down to the bone, causing a huge loss of blood, Mr Viot managed to kite-surf back to a beach where local people and friends rushed to his aid.
'I don't know how I managed it after the attack, but somehow I succeeded in riding back to the shore with my kite surf,' he said after being flown to the Queensland city of Brisbane.
Sunday, September 11, 2011 at 23:37:36 UTC
Monday, September 12, 2011 at 10:37:36 AM at epicenter
Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones
Location:
18.186°S, 167.874°E
Depth:
35.1 km (21.8 miles)
Region:
VANUATU
Distances:
63 km (39 miles) SW of PORT-VILA, Efate, Vanuatu
212 km (131 miles) NW of Isangel, Tanna, Vanuatu
298 km (185 miles) SSE of Luganville, Espiritu Santo, Vanuatu
1844 km (1145 miles) ENE of BRISBANE, Queensland, Australia
The 12:41 p.m. quake was centered about 130 miles northwest of Neah Bay at a depth of 14.3 miles, the U.S. Geological Survey said.
"There is no tsunami watch, warning or advisory for the Washington coast," the Clallam County Sheriff's Office said in a statement.
"There have been no reports of anyone from the county who may have felt the earthquake. There are no damage reports from the British Columbia area."
Janine Bowechop, executive director of the Makah Cultural and Research Center in Neah Bay, was working at the museum when the quake occurred.
"I didn't feel a thing," Bowechop said. "But I'm in one of the biggest buildings in town."
Makah Marina Manager Bob Buckingham was at his Neah Bay home during the quake and did not feel the ground shake.
Clallam Bay Fire Chief Patricia Hutson-English did not feel the quake.
"And I haven't heard reports from anyone who felt it," she said.
Karin Ashton, a volunteer at the Clallam Bay-Sekiu Chamber of Commerce visitors center, said: "This is the first I've heard about it."
"We didn't hear a rumble or anything," Ashton said.
"It's been very calm and quiet."

This NOAA satellite image taken Friday, September 9, 2011 at 1:45 PM EDT shows Hurricane Katia located about 385 miles south-southwest of Halifax, Nova Scotia.
The storm had maximum sustained winds of 45 mph (75 kph) Friday afternoon, with some slight strengthening possible, said the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami. It was centered about 215 miles (345 kilometers) east-southeast of the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe and moving northwest at about 16 mph (26 kph).
Tropical force winds will start lashing the U.S. Virgin Islands on Saturday morning, where the storm is expected to dump up to 6 inches (15 centimeters) of rain, said Walter Snell with the National Weather Service office in Puerto Rico.
"Residents should be prepared for whatever the worst this storm can do," he said.

With computer screens dark, Southwest Airlines workers check passengers in manually Friday at San Diego's airport. Flight cancellations stranded many people after Thursday's massive power failure hit the region.
The failure of a single piece of equipment in Arizona ignited a massive blackout that left nearly 6 million people without power, baffling utility officials and highlighting the vulnerability of the U.S. electrical grid.
Authorities in Arizona said Friday that safeguards built into the system should have prevented the breakdown at a substation from cascading across Southern Arizona and into California and Northern Mexico.
They didn't, and the resulting instability led to the sudden shutdown of the San Onofre nuclear-power plant, about 50 miles north of San Diego, cutting off power to a large swath of Southern California.
"We lost all connection to the outside world," said James Avery, San Diego Gas & Electric's senior vice president of power supply. "This happened in a matter of seconds."
The Environmental Protection Agency said the black substance that has plagued part of the Anacostia since mid-August is not a petroleum product or other hazardous material as was thought. It is, the EPA said, an unusual bloom of algae.
Rated 4.4 on the Richter Scale, the earthquake upset many people, causing hundreds of simultaneously placed emergency calls to police in the state of North-Rhine Westphalia. Though strong for a region unused to quakes, the minor tremor caused no injuries or property damage.
Professor Klaus Hinzen from the University of Cologne pinpointed the epicentre as the town of Goch, bordering the Netherlands in the Lower Rhine region.
The earthquake occurred after 9 pm and was felt within a radius of 200 kilometres.
"From Bielefeld to Brussels, in the Bonn area, and even as far as Amsterdam," Hinzen said.
Thursday's quake was the strongest reported this autumn in Germany. In the past few days, many earthquakes had been recorded in the eastern German region of Vogtland, however, these were much weaker.










