Earth Changes
"The snow was falling for five-seven minutes, it started at about 3:07 p.m.," a resident who lives close to the Yugо-Zapadnaya subway station, the southernmost stop on the Red line, told RIA Novosti. "Now the sun is out again."
Temperatures are expected to drop below freezing on Wednesday night, forecasters from the Fobos weather center told RIA Novosti. Wet snow and rain is in the forecast for Thursday.
Mt Rainier WA
7 Day Forecast
Tonight Snow. Could be heavy at times. Low around 18. South southwest wind 11 to 13 mph. Chance of precipitation 100%. New snow accumulation of 17 to 23 inches possible.
Saturday Snow. Could be heavy at times. High near 24. Windy, with a southwest wind 16 to 26 mph increasing to 26 to 36 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 46 mph. Chance of precipitation 100%. New snow accumulation of 37 to 43 inches possible.
Saturday Night Snow. Could be heavy at times. Low around 15. Windy, with a southwest wind around 37 mph, with gusts as high as 48 mph. Chance of precipitation 100%. New snow accumulation of 25 to 31 inches possible.
More than one month ahead of schedule, the frosty blanket made its earliest appearance since 1986, when snow fell a week earlier on Sept. 18. Before that, the earliest appearance of a winter wonderland at Crater Lake was Sept. 24, 1948.
"It looks like there were sharply higher values of snowfall above 6,000 feet," said meteorologist Shad Keene. "Crater Lake tends to get the brunt of all the precipitation, so the chance of them exceeding a forecast is higher than in most places. It'll really come down."
At elevations 6,000 feet and below, there was anywhere from 1 to 3 inches. "The higher elevations definitely got more than we expected," Keene said.
The snowfall resulted in the closures of Crater Lake's West Rim Drive, East Rim Drive, North Entrance and Pinnacles Road Wednesday, according to the park's website. The West Entrance and South Entrance off Highway 62, Highway 62's access to the park's headquarters, and park headquarters to the Rim Village remained open.
David Archibald, an Australian scientist and visiting fellow at the The Institute of World Politics (IWP) in Washington, D.C., said during an IWP presentation Wednesday that contrary to a perceived consensus among the scientific community, the planet's climate is not warming. Global temperatures have essentially remained flat in the last thirty years, he said.
While temperatures have increased by a modest 0.8 degrees Celsius in the last 150 years, that rise is unremarkable compared to previous increases in earth's history, he said. Temperature spikes have occurred for hundreds of thousands of years and were slightly higher in the Roman Empire and Medieval periods, he added, according to a Swedish study and data from ice cores in Vostok, Antarctica.
Additionally, about 80 percent of the warming that has occurred can be attributed to water vapor compared to about 10 percent for carbon dioxide, said Archibald. The IPCC's report, scheduled for release Friday, is expected to state with 95 percent certainty that greenhouse-gas emissions generated by humans are responsible for 20th century warming.
Green shows ice gain since September 18. Red shows ice loss.
Also, see map showing the huge increase in western Arctic ice since this date last year.
http://stevengoddard.wordpress.com/2013/09/25/rapid-ice-growth-over-the-past-six-days/#comment-275941
Thanks to Ron de Haan for this link

This year has been unusually severe for hornet attacks in Shaanxi province, possibly because of weather changes, says a local health official.
Zhou Yuanhong, a health official in the city of Angkang, in Shaanxi province, said more than 100 people in the area had been stung by swarms of the insects in recent months and treated at hospital, and that 18 of them died.
The local state-run newspaper Huashangbao reported that 21 had died in hospitals.
Zhou said a handful of people are killed every year in the region by hornets, especially in forested areas, but that this year has been unusually severe, possibly because of weather changes.
In the affected village of Sanping, local official Wang Zhengcai said people have been warned to be vigilant if they go into the woods.

A big sinkhole was swallowing cars near the intersection of Richmond and Fountainview in the Galleria
Some drivers mistook the eight-foot-deep hole for a large puddle of water and drove right into it.
Ashley Johnson's 2013 Ford was no match for the sinkhole and one of her wheels got stuck.
"There is a big hole right here. I don't know where this came from," Johnson said.
She was one of the lucky ones because another foot to the left and her car would have sunk.
Brian Muller hit the hole Monday morning before the city put up orange warning cones and barrels.
"I tried to go around the side of it and my car fell in the hole," Muller said. "The water was going over the hole so I did not even know that there was a hole there."
Workers at the restaurant construction site next door pulled Muller's car out. They noticed a big pothole there last Thursday and said they called the city to report it. No one responded.
The weekend downpours then turned the pothole into a sinkhole.
The Public Works Department confirmed it received a phone call about a water main break in the area on Saturday.
Around 1 p.m. Monday, city crews finally closed one lane at the intersection to begin repairs.
They came too late for Muller and Johnson.
"I'm a little more shocked than mad right now. I am mad that my car is, like, probably totaled," Johnson said.
Around 6:45 a.m., an alley off Blair Avenue near Newhouse Avenue collapsed under the wheels of a brand-new trash truck.
"I get cave-ins almost all the time," Third Ward Alderman Freeman Bosley, Sr. turned to look at the truck, sitting in a hole surrounded by broken concrete slabs. "Not quite this bad. This is one of the worst ones I've seen."
Bosley was not shocked, even after learning the driver escaped unhurt.
"I'm glad he's safe. But these old alleys up and down here, this stuff is well over a hundred years old," he explained. "And, anything over a hundred years old deteriorates."
Bosley also explained the sinkhole was just another symptom of the city's budget problems.
2013-09-26 06:46:04 UTC
2013-09-26 00:46:04 UTC-06:00 at epicenter
Location
14.479°N 93.332°W depth=10.4km (6.5mi)
Nearby Cities
101km (63mi) WSW of Puerto Madero, Mexico
115km (71mi) SSW of Mapastepec, Mexico
119km (74mi) SW of Huixtla, Mexico
120km (75mi) W of Suchiate, Mexico
304km (189mi) W of Guatemala City, Guatemala
Technical Data

Workers attempt to clear a drainage that was clogged from a flash flood September 12, 2013 in Boulder, Colorado. An estimated 6-10 inches of rain fell in 12-18 hours and more is expected throughout the day. Flash flood sirens warned people to stay away from Boulder Creek and seek higher ground.
The spill from a damaged tank was reported to the Colorado Department of Natural Resources Wednesday afternoon by Anadarko Petroleum, the company responsible for the spill.
Nearly 1,900 oil and gas wells in flooded areas of Colorado are shut, and 600 workers are inspecting and repairing sites, according to the Colorado Oil and Gas Association.
Anadarko, the second-largest operator in the operator in the Denver-Julesburg Basin, has shut down 250 tank batteries and 670 wells.












Comment: See also: Is there a media blackout on the fracking flood disaster in Colorado?