Earth Changes
Incessant heavy rains in Arunachal Pradesh and the affected districts triggered the first wave of floods with 75,000 people being displaced as their dwellings were washed away, the officials said. The state government, after sounding the alert, directed the National Disaster Management teams and district administrations to provide rescue, medical and relief materials to the affected people, they said.
The road link between Assam and Arunachal Pradesh through Dhemaji district has been severed following the flood waters running over National Highway-52 at Samarajan. The rising waters of the Brahmaputra were also swelling the streams inside the one-horned rhino habitat Kaziranga National Park in Golaghat district, Park sources said.
The Uzbek emergency ministry said the quake, in the Ferghana valley, also injured 86 people.
Kyrgyzstan has so far reported no casualties. The quake struck at 0135 on Wednesday (1935 GMT Tuesday).
It was centred 42km (26 miles) south-west of the city of Ferghana at a depth of 18km, the US Geological Survey said.
The dead fish started washing ashore Monday morning near Vanderbilt Beach in Collier County, just north of Naples. Now, state researchers in the Bay Area work to figure out what's killing all the sea life.
"We can microscope, analyze the cells at the cellular level," Biologist Catalina Brown tells 10 News as she sorts through tissue samples from dead fish at the Fish & Wildlife Research Institute in St. Petersburg. Brown is one state researcher working to solve the mystery of what's killing all sorts of fish in Collier County.
The volcano's southeast crater began to show fractures on the Monday afternoon, says volcanologist Tom Pfeiffer, who leads volcano tours through Volcano Discovery. At just after midnight Tuesday morning it began to mildly erupt and the tour group walked to a viewpoint on the rim of the Valle del Bove.
At around 2:30 am the volcano began to send up fountins of lava 1,600 feet into the air, Pfeiffer said via email from Italy.
"At the peak of the eruption at around 3 am, the fountains pulsated between an estimated 500-800 m height, with large incandescent bombs visible more than 1 kilometer above the vent and landing behind southeast crater," he wrote. "The fountains gradually decreased by around 4 am and the activity turned into exploding giant lava bubbles, detonating with loud noise, and throwing large bombs up to 1 km in spherical directions above the crater. This activity slowly waned until dawn. While the fountains lasted, the crater wall was completely covered by incandescent lava."
The department says it received reports of about 1,000 dead fish floating in parts of the Normanby River, at the Rinyirru (Lakefield) National Park, last week.
Most of the dead fish were barramundi and jewfish.
The department has been testing the river's water quality but says acidity, salinity and dissolved oxygen levels are all normal, and there is no evidence of contamination.
A spokesman says fish deaths can occur naturally in water courses with rapid changes to water temperature.
He says there is no evidence the fish pose a risk to public health.
Samples of the fish have been tested and results are expected next week.

The National Weather Service has placed nearly 20 states throughout the US under a heat warning, watch or advisory.
The National Weather Service put 18 states stretching from Montana to Texas to West Virginia under a heat warning, watch or advisory, with the heat index topping 38C (100F) in most locations.
The heat is expected to move east in the next several days.
More than 1,000 US heat records have been broken this month, officials said.
Though many US states have recently seen temperatures over 90F, some regions saw heat indexes - a combination of air temperature and relative humidity - up to 131F.
A massive snowstorm dumped some six feet of snow on Chile's Araucancia region, leaving many without power and communities completely cut off from the rest of the country.
Residents of the mountainous region of the Andes were forced to dig out from massive piles of snow and television footage showed homes almost completely burried in the snow.
A heavy snow season has disrupted highways and mountain passes connecting the southern Chilean region with Argentina via snowy Andes Mountain passes.
"The problem is the roads, that's all. We are cut-off from everything, but they're going to have to open it," said one resident of the Araucania region on Monday (July 18).
Emergency crews were removing snow from vital highways to allow for transportation to continue in and out of the secluded area as residents said they were also facing communication complications.

In this photo provided by Wyoming Highway Patrol, a van which was carrying four members of a family who died, is seen downstream from washed-out section of Wyoming Highway 130 in the Medicine Bow Mountains in southern Wyoming on Tuesday, July 19, 2011. They were fleeing torrential rains at a national forest campground.
A mother and her three young daughters were killed; only the husband and father managed to escape as the van was carried away.
Officials said debris in the creek blocked large culverts that run under the highway and the water then tore through the roadway, opening a 25-foot-wide, 9-foot-deep breach about 20 miles from Saratoga in the southern part of the state.
The van went into the creek sometime between 1:15 a.m. and 1:40 a.m. and was swept about 75 yards downstream and submerged up to its rooftop, patrol spokesman Stephen Townsend.
Minutes later, a local emergency management official who was responding to the accident hit the same washout and plunged into the creek.
In comparison, Nelson's Column stands 169 feet tall and the pedestrian walkways between the two towers of Tower Bridge are 143 feet above the River Thames. The Rio statue stands at 130ft.
The study by 150 experts from 48 research organisations across the country determined that the wave that roared out of the Pacific on March 11 was the largest to ever hit Japan when it struck the Omoeaneyoshi district of Miyako City, in Iwate Prefecture.
The experts collected data from 5,400 locations the length of the east coast of Japan after the magnitude 9.0 undersea earthquake. The survey used marks left on buildings and trees that rise up the sides of the valley where the town is located to reach a conclusion on the scale of the disaster.
The group had previously estimated the height of the tsunami at 127.6 feet, which was already above the 125.3 feet reached by the previous record wave, which was set by the Minami Sanriku Earthquake in 1896.












