Earth Changes
As over 1,000 lightning strikes were recorded in the Myrtle Beach area Wednesday afternoon, one viewer took a spectacular slow-motion video of one bolt striking the ocean. Nathan Polk was rolling from the 6th floor of his condo off Ocean Boulevard, near 17th Avenue North, when lightning struck off-shore. The First Alert Weather Team's weather information system recorded over 1,000 lightning strikes in Myrtle Beach and the surrounding area as a storm rolled through at about 1 p.m. Wednesday.
According to the District Police Office, Makwanpur, the deceased have been identified as Tara Rumba (46) and Kumar Bal (25) of Sersere, Basamadi.
Police said that Anju Rumba (18), Chongsang Bal (13), Krishna Bahadur Bal (55) and Sun Maya Rumba (45) were injured in the incident.
The injured are receiving treatment at the Hetaunda Hospital, police said.

Villagers walk through the area affected by landslides in Banjarnegara, Central Java, Indonesia. Sunday, June 19, 2016. An Indonesian official said dozens of people have been killed by flooding and landslides in central Java and many others remain missing.
Dozens of houses were buried in the landslides and thousands of homes were inundated by floods in 16 districts and towns over the weekend.
The dead included two 10-year-olds and a pregnant woman.
The spokesman for the National Disaster Management Agency, Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, said that 26 villagers were missing in the worst-hit district of Purworejo, where 11 people died.
He said seven people were killed in Kebumen district and six in Banjarnegara district.
"There has been a great tragedy in Karelia," Sobyanin said. "According to the preliminary data, 10 children from Moscow have died on Lake Syamozero. Condolences to the families and friends [of the victims]," the mayor wrote on Twitter.
The tourist group that got caught in the storm consisted of two boats and one raft, according to information from the Emergencies Ministry. Rescuers have managed to save 11 people so far, the ministry said in a statement.
There were 47 children and 4 adults on board the three tourist vessels, Investigative Committee spokesman Vladimir Markin said in a statement.
Only those children who were in life vests managed to survived, children's rights ombudsman Pavel Astakhov wrote on Twitter.

Hundreds of thousands of giant spider crabs gather on the floor of Port Phillip Bay, and now in your nightmares.
Sheree Marris, an Australian aquatic scientist, captured video of the crabs, which feature nearly 30-inch legs attached to their 6-inch-wide bodies, gathering on the floor of Port Phillip Bay.
Marris said the spectacle was the largest gathering of crabs she had ever seen.
"I've been diving for 15 to 20 years and I've seen a lot of cool things, but this is the largest aggregation I've ever seen -- a never-ending mass of crabs," she told 9News. "I was going in a straight line swimming and for five minutes I kept seeing thousands and thousands of them."
The crabs were making an annual migration that has previously been documented on video, but this year's migration appears unusually large, possibly the largest ever documented.
The extreme weather phenomenon came in the wake of three earlier tornadoes that had swept through the plains of Xanthi. Destruction was noted at the municipalities of Avdiron and Topirou, whereas problems were also noted at Komotini, where crops were destroyed.
The bad bout of weather also caused problems to traffic with various points of the network cut off, chiefly in settlements of the Municipality of Arrianon, such as Dokos and Vragia.
Cars were swept away by the rush of flood water. Residents are now counting the damage to breeding units and crops. The Fire brigade and police are also on alert.
Worker John Anderson, 56, was killed by a "sudden and powerful release of gas" at the Boulby mine early on Friday, owners ICL UK said.
No-one else was hurt and there was no explosion at the 1,400m deep mine.
In April seven workers were injured when after a fire broke out at the mine, which has tunnels deep under the North Sea.
Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland MP Tom Blenkinsop has called for an investigation.
The mine makes potash for fertilisers and employs about 1,100 people about 100 of whom were underground at the time of the incident.
A 61-year-old man died, crushed by a tree yesterday while driving his car in the central town of Zgierz. His two passengers were hospitalized in serious condition.
Two other men also died, crushed by walls blown over by violent winds in the towns of Niechlonin in the north-west, and Zaluski in central Poland.
A woman drowned in the northern city of Elbag when a pedestrian bridge collapsed into a river swollen by heavy rain.
High winds ripped off roofs and toppled trees causing property damage in various locations across the country, while heavy rains triggered local flash flooding.
Source: AFP
A team of researchers from the University of Chicago has been comparing the shells of live mussels pulled from the Pacific coast today with historical shells, some of them thousands of years old. They've come to an alarming realization: Mussel shells are getting thinner and thinner.
Shells collected that are over 1,000 years old are on average 27 percent thicker than today's shells, the researchers note in new paper in Proceedings of the Royal Society B. Thick shells were the norm until about the 1970s, when shells were 32 percent thicker than they are today. Then, things suddenly started to get thin fast.
The unsettling cause for the thinning shells is the rapidly acidifying waters of the Pacific Ocean. Essentially, the mussels are in the process of a slow dissolve in the acid bath they now spend their lives stewing in.
If the thought of being slowly consumed from all around as you swim isn't quite horrifying enough, the researchers project that this is only the beginning of the bad news for yummy shellfish. With an ocean that's only growing more and more acidic, we could easily see mussels—with their new brittle bodies—die out.
Reference - Royal Society B












