Earth Changes
Anthony Bonsante, of South River, was fishing for catfish in a stream of DeVoe Lake, between Domino's Pizza and Immaculate Conception, an area that came highly recommended by his dad, who fished there in his youth.
"As it started to get dark, I lit my lantern," Bonsante said Monday afternoon. "As soon as it really got dark all around me, I heard something walking around. I thought it was something small like a rabbit or something."
But the noise kept coming closer. Bonsante said he picked up his lantern and started to look around.
"I saw two big yellow eyes in the small patch of woods nearby," he said. "I held my lantern up and it started walking towards me. It bowed its head and started to growl at me. It started to circle up on me. I was panicked for a second. I thought, "What do I have to defend myself?' "
He saw a big stick a few feet away and, without turning his back on the animal, he grabbed the stick.
Bottlenose dolphins are usually a rare sight in the waters surrounding Denmark but in the past week there have been several spotted swimming near the nation's second-largest city, Aarhus.
Rowers and boaters in the Bay of Aarhus have had unusual company over the past week or so. Several Danes have reported that they have seen dolphins swimming in the bay and a handful of videos are starting to circulate around the internet.
Marine biologist Carl Christian Kinze told TV2 Østjylland that the recent sightings of bottlenose dolphins are incredibly rare.
"They haven't been seen in the Bay of Aarhus with certainty for more than 20 years," he said.
Something seems to be happening in the waters around Denmark.
Not only are bottlenose dolphins now being found frolicking in the Bay of Aarhus, but now humpback whales seem to have arrived off Danish shores as well.
A five-metre long humpback washed up on a beach near Thy last week, creating a bit of a mystery because the corpse lacked a cranium and the whale's tail had been wrapped in rope.
Researchers from the Natural History Museum of Denmark spent Monday cutting the corpse into manageable-sized chunks for further examination in hopes of clearing up the strange find.
"This is huge. Humpback whales aren't normally seen in Denmark. There are only a few times per year that we need to cut a whale up and last summer it was a couple of sperm whales," the museum's Morten Tange Olsen told BT.

In this photo provided by Las Vegas Fire & Rescue, a motorist is stranded in floodwaters at Rancho and Teddy drives on Monday, July 6, 2015.
The hardest-hit areas included Lone Mountain and Summerlin in the northwest, which received 0.75 to an inch of rain, National Weather Service meteorologist Chris Stachelski said. The eastern part of the Lakes tallied 1.5 inches of rain.
Stachelski said the average rainfall around the valley was about 0.25 inch, with North Las Vegas only getting a trace.
Firefighters responded to a dozen weather-related incidents in the area bounded by Rainbow Boulevard to the west, Interstate 15 to the east, Alta Drive to the north and Desert Inn Road, Las Vegas Fire & Rescue spokesman Tim Szymanski said.
A crew from the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department is on scene.
A DWSD spokeswoman said an 18-inch water main broke, damaging the sewer and leading to this sinkhole in the pavement.
However, the department dose not see a need to closed the street to traffic.
"We analyzed it. We're able to determine if (we needed to close the street) ... we would put up more barricades or actually make the area a little safer to work on and walk on," said DWSD spokeswoman Curtrise Garner. "We're pretty comfortable with where everything is. We're comfortable with the amount of traffic coming by."
Syabas corporate affairs executive director Priscilla Alfred said the car fell into the sinkhole measuring 2m wide and 2m long.
The water, she said, was from an unreported underground pipe that had burst, causing the sinkhole.
"The car was not damaged during the incident. The driver was also reported to be fine and could drive the car out unassisted."
Priscilla said a team was despatched to the scene immediately and water supply was disconnected to facilitate repair works.
- 2015-07-07 05:10:27 (UTC)
- Times in other timezones
- 99km (62mi) ENE of Shikotan, Russia
- 204km (127mi) ENE of Nemuro, Japan
- 228km (142mi) E of Shibetsu, Japan
- 294km (183mi) E of Abashiri, Japan
- 1159km (720mi) NE of Tokyo, Japan

Children play in the Salmon Street Springs fountain in Portland, Ore., Wednesday, July 1, 2015.
WASHINGTON
Seattle, not accustomed to prolonged hot weather, saw its hottest June ever.
The average high temperature each day in June was a record 78.9 degrees, breaking the 1992 record by more than 3 degrees, said Johnny Burg, a meteorologist at the National Weather Service in Seattle.
"Our high is supposed to be in the low to mid 70s at this time and lows in the mid-50s," he said.
Instead, the Seattle area is seeing highs in the 80s and lows in the 60s.
Because the Seattle area suffers few heat waves, many people do not have air conditioning.
The weather was also dry in the Seattle area in June, when only 0.23 inch of precipitation was recorded. That's the fourth driest June on record.
The thermometer in Kitzingen in the southern state of Bavaria read 40.3 degrees Sunday, breaking the 2003 record by 0.1 degrees, the German Weather Service said. It was the highest temperature Germany has experienced since the start of record-keeping in 1881.
Weather service spokesman Uwe Kirsche said Monday that the record will not be official until technicians have manually checked the station.
But he says "we assume that our equipment worked properly."

A father holds his daughter as they wade through waist-deep flooding caused by typhoon Linfa, locally named Egay, at Longos town in Malabon city, north of Manila, on July 6, 2015.
Storm warnings were issued in at least 14 areas of the main Philippine island of Luzon as tropical storm Linfa moved slowly across the north of the Southeast Asian archipelago. It was carrying maximum wind gusts of 100 km per hour (60 mph).
Alexander Pama, executive director of the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council, said the storm would bring heavy rain within a 400-km (250 miles) radius. The storm was named Egay in the Philippines.












Comment: While the west coast of the US bakes and is bone dry, Europe is experiencing a heat wave of their own with all time record temperatures. At the same time it is snowing in parts of Russia! You can't get much more extreme than that. It is as if the earth is responding with extremes as the human activity heats up. For more on the theory that human activity has an impact on how the universe interacts in kind with humanity read Earth Changes and the Human-Cosmic Connection.