Earth Changes
The largest in the sequence, a magnitude 3.6 earthquake, came at 12:19 p.m. Friday. The U.S. Geological Survey received reports from more than 1,000 people who said they felt the quake, extending from the East Bay and into San Francisco. The quake was quite shallow, less than a third of a mile under the surface of the earth.
A magnitude 2.8 aftershock was felt two minutes later.
Earthquake swarms like the one that began on Feb. 16 in the Danville area have been common over the past few decades, occurring in 1970, 1976, 1990, 2002, 2003 and 2015. They occur in the San Ramon Valley corridor along Interstate 680 between Walnut Creek and the Dublin and Pleasanton areas, said U.S. Geological Survey research geologist Belle Philibosian.
The Calaveras fault runs right along the San Ramon Valley. In the Danville area, the fault zone transitions and steps over to the Concord fault, which continues north into Concord, Philibosian said. There is a complex zone of small faults in this transition area.
While the San Andreas and Hayward faults are well known to many in the Bay Area for their seismic risk, the Calaveras and Concord faults also pose a substantial risk. The Calaveras fault is as long as the Hayward fault, for instance, and can produce a magnitude 7 earthquake, Philibosian said.
The swimmer was in the water at Congwong Beach in La Perouse at 7pm on Friday when she was attacked by what is believed to have been a shark.
In the wake of the attack, the local council has announced all beaches in the area will be closed on 'for at least Saturday'.
The woman, who is aged in her 50s, was taken to St George Hospital where she is being treated for severe lacerations to one of her legs.
A NSW Ambulance spokesman said it was unclear what species of shark had bitten the woman.
Oklahoma Game Wardens posted a video to Facebook showing the eagle sparkling on the Osage/Kay county line, where it was found covered in ice by ranchers.
Game Warden Spencer Grace responded to the location and determined the icy eagle was unable to fly more than a short distance after being caught in the recent ice storm.
Grace captured the eagle and brought it into his truck, where he used the vehicle's heater to thaw the frosty avian for about 45 minutes.
Triggered by days of heavy rain, the landslide struck in Pasir Panjang, Brebes Regency on Thursday 22 February, 2018.
A 600-strong search and rescue (SAR) team is working in the area searching for those still missing. At least 14 other people were left injured by the landslide.
Comment: Brutal cold likely to make comeback in Northeast US following once-in-100-year warmth
Since the list below is mind-boggling, you may like to check out SOTT's monthly documentary tracking these changes: SOTT Earth Changes Summary - January 2018: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs
Europeans longing for spring will just have to be patient for awhile. Indeed this winter has been a harsh one across the northern hemisphere with record cold temperatures being set from Siberia to North America to Japan. Also a number of places have seen record snowfalls.
The European Alps have had one of the snowiest winters in years as snow continues to pile up meters high.
The weather pattern that produced hundreds of daily record highs and dozens of record highs for the month of February is probably on the order of a once-in-100-years or perhaps 200-years event.
More record warmth is forecast for the Southeast states into this weekend.
Comment: Europe is forecast an equally brutal return of winter: The polar vortex just split into a double vortex - cold temps for Europe will persist
And this is after an already record breaking winter for the northern hemisphere:
- Temperatures in Siberia dropping to -79°F/-60°C and winter is just beginning
- France's wettest winter
- US: Polar vortex to bring 'extended period of severe winter weather', amidst already record breaking cold - UPDATE
- Snowfall over the Sahara Desert - second winter in a row!
- Moscow buried in heaviest late January snowfall in 50 years (PHOTOS)
- A dark December: In one month Moscow totals 6 minutes of sunlight while Belgium bears just 10.5 hours
Snowy owl numbers fluctuate year to year based on their primary prey, lemmings, giant mouse-like rodents, whose population also oscillates based on food supplies and weather conditions in the Arctic. When populations spike, the owls respond with higher than normal breeding, with some nests containing ten or more eggs. The subsequent invasions later that fall result in not so much a food scarcity, but because of the abundance of food earlier that summer. Young owls tend to leave the Arctic each winter, resulting in the larger than normal invasion occurring now.
This time, that data concerns the recent record-breaking cold across the northeastern U.S. which NOAA is trying to erase from history.
If you believe NOAA's charts, there was nothing particularly unusual about this winter's cold weather which caused sharks to freeze in the ocean and iguanas to drop out of trees.
Here is NOAA's January 2018 chart for Northeast U.S. - an area which includes New England along with NY, PA, NJ, DE and MD.
You'd never guess from it that those regions had just experienced record-breaking cold, would you?
Comment: Well the NOAA is certainly consistent:
- Whistleblower: No more global warming, NOAA scientists falsified temperature data, MSM ignores
- Fake science: Remember how NOAA says each year is 'hottest ever'? Whistleblower sez US govt agency falsifies data to serve global agenda
- 100% of U.S. 'Warming' is due to NOAA data tampering
- Climate science fiction: NOAA avoids atmospheric satellite data which shows no global warming in last two decades
- Record waves, rain and snow across U. S. West Coast but NOAA forecasts drought
- Temperature data faked NOAA, NASA and HadCRU caught red handed
- Global temperature data is almost entirely made up by NOAA
- Global warming fraud: NOAA shows record warming where NO temperature stations exist
The Middle Creek Wildlife Management Area hit its highest number of snow geese ever, topping out at an estimated 200,000 birds, the Pennsylvania Game Commission reported on its website.
The previous record of 170,000 birds was recorded in 2007.
Unfortunately, warmer temperatures caused a large number of geese to move north. Thursday's count was 65,000 snow geese, 4,000 Canada geese, and 5,500 tundra swans.
The 6,000-acre wildlife area in Lancaster and Lebanon counties is an annual destination for the waterfowl as they migrate north to their breeding grounds.















Comment: Some other earthquake swarms recorded from around the world recently include: