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Fire

Spain: Catalonia battles worst wildfire in 20 years amid heatwave

Hilly terrain, high temperatures and strong
© Jordi Borras/AP
Hilly terrain, high temperatures and strong winds have frustrated firefighters' efforts to contain the blaze
The still-raging blaze has devoured more than 5,500 hectares of land, forcing people to evacuate and killing animals.

Catalan firefighters are battling the worst wildfire the Spanish region has seen in 20 years as Europe swelters in the grip of an intense heatwave.

Hundreds of firefighters struggled to contain a wildfire in the northeastern region of Catalonia on Friday that has scorched more than 5,500 hectares of land and forced the evacuation of some 53 residents.

A day earlier, authorities warned that the blaze, which began on Wednesday afternoon, could easily devour 20,000 hectares if it was not contained.


Fire

France records highest-ever temperatures as Europe melts in heatwave

arc triomphe

Hellish
France has hit its highest recorded temperature - 45.9C (114.6F) - amid a heatwave in Europe that has claimed several lives.


Comment: This is an astonishing 1.5 degrees higher than the previous all-time record.


The new record was measured in the southern town of Gallargues-le-Montueux. Before this year the previous record was 44.1C during a heatwave in 2003 that killed thousands.


Comment: Actually, the previous high was 44C, set in Toulouse in August 1923.

2003 was exceptional in that temperatures remained high all summer long, but it was never quite this intense. It is, however, forecast to cool off in Europe by next week...


Health Minister Agnès Buzyn has said "everyone is at risk".

France's weather service has issued an unprecedented red alert for four areas.

Those are all in the south, but most of the country remains on orange alert, the second highest level.

Attention

Papua New Guinea rocked with 2nd volcanic eruption within 2 days

Manam Island is one of the Pacific nation's most active volcanoes.
© Storyful, file
Manam Island is one of the Pacific nation's most active volcanoes.
Just two days after the sudden eruption of Papua New Guinea's (PNG) Mount Ulawun, a second volcano on the island of Manam also erupted on Friday, sending volcanic ash into the air and sparking concerns regarding already stretched emergency response efforts.

The 10-km Manam Island in PNG's northern province of Madang began erupting at roughly 8:50 a.m. local time, according to the Australian Bureau of Meteorology's Volcanic Ash Advisory Center (VAAC) Darwin.

Manam Island is one of PNG's most active volcanoes, as well as being home to roughly 9,000 people.

The eruption created a large ash cloud reaching a height of roughly 15,240 meters which has since dissipated, with a subsequent ongoing eruption continuing to produce an ash plume to a height of roughly 4,572 meters.

Comment: Ulawun volcano erupts in Papua New Guinea, sends residents fleeing - ash sent over 13km into the air


Doberman

Toddler attacked and killed by family dog in Newman, California

PIT BULL ATTACK
A two-year-old toddler is dead after he was attacked by a family dog in Stanislaus County.

The attack happened on Thursday night on Pine Street, near Inyo Avenue, in Newman. Police say the child was taken to the hospital where he was pronounced dead after being attacked by a pit bull mix.

The dog has been quarantined by animal control and the investigation is ongoing.


Cloud Lightning

Lightning bolt striking tree filmed in Northeast Portland

lighting
A Portland resident jumped in shock on June 26 when she captured a lightning bolt hitting a tree outside her home as thunderstorms rolled through the area.

The National Weather Service warned at 6.20 pm that strong thunderstorms moving north through the Portland-Vancouver area would bring "lightning, downpours, small hail and gusty winds in excess of 40 mph."

Becca Shelley said she was filming the storm from a doorway in the Gresham neighborhood of the city at 6.40 pm when the lightning struck the tree.


Credit: Becca Shelley via Storyful

Cloud Lightning

Lightning strikes kill at least 20 across the Indian state of Jharkhand in 3 days

lightning
With monsoon hitting Jharkhand there has been some relief, but at least 20 people have also been reported dead due to lightning in different parts of the state over the last three days, police said.

Nine people died on Thursday, seven on Wednesday and rest on Friday.

According to the police three deaths were reported from Lathear, two from Palamau, four in Gumla and Lohardagga district. While there were similar deaths in Jamshedpur, Bokaro, Hazaribagh, Sahebganj also.

Every year 50 to 60 people die due to lightning in the state.

Source: IANS

Comment: Lightning strikes kill at least 30 people across the Indian state of Bihar in 24 hours


Seismograph

Strong magnitude 6.4 earthquake strikes Maug Islands region, Northern Mariana Islands

quake
Strong, magnitude 6.4 earthquake struck Northern Mariana Islands' Maug Islands region today.

Preliminary Earthquake Report:

Magnitude 6.4

Date-Time 28 Jun 2019 15:51:31 UTC

29 Jun 2019 01:51:31 near epicenter

Cloud Precipitation

Roads swamped after torrential rain in Serbia and Croatia - 4 inches hit Belgrade in under 2 hours

Flooding in Novi Beograd, Serbia yesterday, June 23rd

Flooding in Novi Beograd, Serbia, June 23rd
Parts of Serbia and Croatia were hit by heavy rain on 23 June, 2019, causing flash flooding.

Croatia

In Croatia, the country's civil protection directorate (Ravnateljstvo civilne zaštite) said that rain on 23 June caused flooding in Brod-Posavina county including Slavonski Brod and surrounding areas after rivers broke their banks. Basements of houses were flooded, several roads were blocked and crops and farm land damaged. Fire crews carried out over 60 interventions in the area, pumping water or clearing flood debris.

Civil protection also reported flooding in Breznik Našičko, Osijek-Baranja County and in parts of Požega-Slavonia County, where fire crews were called out to flood incidents in Pleternica and Čaglin.

Arrow Up

Eruption of Russian volcano, dormant for almost 100 years, captured from space

An astronaut's photo of the Raikoke volcano erupting on June 22, 2019
© NASA
An astronaut's photo of the Raikoke volcano erupting on June 22, 2019.
The volcano sat dormant for almost a century. Then at 4 a.m. last Saturday, it awoke.

In striking photos captured by satellites and astronauts on the International Space Station, smoke billows from the volcano on Raikoke, northeast of Japan. The uninhabited island saw its first volcanic eruption since 1924.

The photos released this week by NASA show volcanic plumes that rarely rise from the stratovolcano, which is almost a half-mile wide and 650 feet deep.

Raikoke is a tiny island of not even 2 square miles in the Sea of Okhotsk and has been under Russia's control since World War II.

The eruption consisted of at least nine explosions and lasted into the evening, according to the Smithsonian Institution's Global Volcanism Program.

The ash plumes containing large amounts of sulfur dioxide rose as high as 42,700 feet, or 8 miles. Lightning was detected in the plumes as they drifted east and northeast, the report said.


Comment: According to Marina Chibisova, a senior researcher at the laboratory of volcanology and volcanic danger at the Institute of Marine Geology and Geophysics of the Far East Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, the eruption of the Raikok volcano on the eponymous Kuril island resulted in the death of flora and fauna in the region.

"The flora and fauna of the island, which was restored after the last eruption of Raikoke in 1924, was destroyed by pyroclastic flows and ash falls," she said.

Post apocalyptic photos of Raikoke eruption on June 22, 2019
© Nikolay Pavlov / http://easttour.ru
Post apocalyptic photos of Raikoke eruption on June 22, 2019.



Attention

Ulawun volcano erupts in Papua New Guinea, sends residents fleeing - ash sent over 13km into the air

A pilot for Niugini Helicopters flying near the crater witnessed a column of lava spurting vertically into the equatorial sky, along with ash that has been belching since early morning on June 26, 2019
© AFP/NIUGINI HELICOPTERS
A pilot for Niugini Helicopters flying near the crater witnessed a column of lava spurting vertically into the equatorial sky, along with ash that has been belching since early morning on June 26, 2019
Papua New Guinea's volatile Ulawun volcano - designated one of the world's most hazardous - erupted on Wednesday (June 26), spewing lava high in the air and sending residents fleeing.

A pilot for Niugini Helicopters flying near the crater witnessed a column of lava spurting vertically into the equatorial sky, along with ash that has been belching since early morning.

Ulawun, on the remote Bismarck Archipelago chain, is listed as one of 16 "Decade Volcanoes" targeted for research because they pose a significant risk of large, violent eruptions.