Earth ChangesS


Bizarro Earth

Vanishing Lakes: New Zealand Reservoir Mysteriously Disappears During Quake



Huntsbury, New Zealand - 36 million liters of water mysteriously disappeared from a reservoir in Huntsbury New Zealand following the February 22nd 6.3 earthquake in Christchurch.

These events have occurred in the past and are now happening with greater frequency as geological forces under the ground continue to erode substrata. Our planet is undergoing massive change beneath our feet. This geological deformation will only accelerate and become more widespread with time as the pace of earthchanges intensify.

Arrow Up

7.2 earthquake hits northeast Japan; no damage

Image
© AFP/Sam YehPhoto illustration of a seismic chart. Japan issued a tsunami warning Wednesday after a major 7.2-magnitude quake struck 160 kilometres (100 miles) east off the main Honshu island at 0245 GMT, swaying buildings in the capital Tokyo.
Tokyo - A magnitude 7.2 earthquake hit off Japan's northeastern coast Wednesday, shaking buildings hundreds of miles away in Tokyo and triggering a small tsunami. There were no immediate reports of significant damage or injuries.

The quake struck at 11:45 a.m. local time and was centered about 90 miles (150 kilometers) off the northeastern coast - about 270 miles (440 kilometers) northeast of Tokyo - at a depth of about 6.2 miles (10 kilometers), Japan's meteorological agency said.

A 24-inch (60-centimeter) tsunami reached the coastal town of Ofunato, in Iwate prefecture, with other towns reporting smaller waves reaching shore about 30 minutes after the quake.

"We have confirmed that small tsunami have come up on the shores, but we have no reports of damage at this point," said Shinobu Nagano, an emergency and disaster response official in Iwate. "We are still trying to determine the impact of the quake."

Some train lines in the area were temporarily stopped after the quake, but they were restarted shortly after noon. Tohoku Electric Power said there was no damage at its nuclear power facility in the region.

Blackbox

US: Millions of fish found dead in California marina

Redondo Beach - Millions of dead fish were found Tuesday floating in a Southern California marina.

Boaters awakened to find a carpet of small silvery fish surrounding their vessels, said Staci Gabrielli, marine coordinator for King Harbor Marina on the Los Angeles County coast.

California Fish and Game officials believe the fish are anchovies and sardines.

Experts had yet to determine what happened, but Gabrielli said the fish appeared to have moved into the harbor to escape a red tide, a naturally occurring bloom of toxic algae that can poison fish or starve them of oxygen.

High winds overnight might then have trapped the fish in the harbor, crushing them against a wall where they used up the oxygen and suffocated, she said.

The dead fish were so thick in some places that Garbrielli said boats can't get out of the harbor.

Fish and Game authorities arrived and began taking samples of the fish.

"We have no idea how they got here," said spokesman Andrew Hughan. "There are thousands and thousands and thousands of fish."

Additional pictures here.

Comment: Update: Fox News footage of the fish floating in King Harbor:




Sun

Ghana: Halo Appears Around Sun


Ghanaians were held spellbound when the halo phenomenon emerged in the skies late Wednesday morning. Hundreds of people stepped out of their offices to take pictures of the celestial wonders. Onlookers believed it was signs of the last days. "Jesus is coming today," fascinated Victoria Mintah told AfricaNews.

However, meteorologists said the phenomenon known as halo phenomenon is natural around the world.

Bizarro Earth

Pakistan: Giant Fissure / Crack Opens in the Ground in Seagi Gulistan


Snowman

US: 2 Feet of Snow, Flooding Deluge New England, New York

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© The Associated Press / Toby TalbotDave Jacobs tries to shovel out his car so he could head to Mad River ski area on Monday, March 7, 2011 in Montpelier, Vt. The National Weather Service says the winter storm that's whacking northern Vermont is going to be one for the record books. Meteorologist Bruce Taber says 20.6 inches of snow has fallen at the Burlington International Airport and it's supposed to keep snowing through the early afternoon. He says some parts of northern Vermont could get up to 30 inches of snow.
A fierce winter storm was blanketing northern New England and upstate New York with up to 30 inches of snow Monday, while western Connecticut was deluged with so much rain that parts of homes and cars floated down a swollen river.

As of 1 p.m., 23.3 inches of snow had fallen at Burlington International Airport - the biggest March snowfall there on record_ and it wasn't finished yet.

At Aubuchon Hardware in downtown Montpelier, the most popular types of snow shovels were sold out, the grass seed was on display and store were readying shelves for more springtime wares.

"Smile, folks - it's coming," Tom Walbridge said of the spring season scheduled to start in just two weeks. Outside told a different story.

The storm helped push the winter of 2010-11 up the record list. Even before the snow stopped, it became the fourth-snowiest winter on record in Burlington, at 121.4 inches, and the storm appeared potent enough to challenge the famous Valentine's Day blitz in 2007 that dumped 25.7 inches on Burlington, Taber said.

Bizarro Earth

New Zealand: Mt Ruapehu Heating Up - GeoNet

Mount Ruapehu
© Ma5912 / WikipediaMt.Ruapehu from the Desert Road, 2005.

Mount Ruapehu is heating up -- but there's no need to panic, a volcanologist says.

Ruapehu's Crater Lake has reached 40degC, the third-highest temperature recorded at the lake since 2002.

Other signs, including gas output, minor seismic activity and changes in lake chemistry were also typical of a volcano in a heating cycle, GeoNet vulcanologist Tony Hurst said.

Ruapehu entered its current heating cycle last October, the eighth since the lake was re-established in 2002 after the 1995-1996 eruptions.

Ruapehu is on volcanic alert level one, which indicates signs of volcano unrest, but Mr Hurst told NZPA that was normal for an active volcano such as Ruapehu.

Bizarro Earth

Best of the Web: New Zealand: Threat of Earthquakes Pales Beside The 50 Volcanoes on Our Doorstep

Rangitoto
© Brett PhibbsRangitoto, sitting at our front door, a silent reminder of its violent arrival in two eruptions 600-700 years ago.

It hardly needs an official list from the council to remind Aucklanders that, like Christchurch, this city is peppered with old buildings that are likely to tumble down in a severe earthquake.

The main arterial roads through well-established suburbs such as Newmarket, Herne Bay, Mt Eden, Dominion Rd, Onehunga and Otahuhu all have clusters of 100-year-old, two-storey brick retail premises, shops downstairs, dwellings above.

In the CBD, old masonry buildings provide the "character" between the anonymous glass towers. Some have been strengthened, many not. The day after the Christchurch earthquake I emerged from a lunch bar in downtown Queens Arcade debating which side of the street would be safer to walk up if I succumbed to quake phobia.

Of course, venturing below the old harbour shoreline at Shortland St to the arcade was a bad move to start with. The old Auckland Regional Council's earthquake hazard guide warns that ground shaking would be greater in "reclaimed land such as parts of downtown Auckland".

This would also be prone to liquefaction, but only if the shake was "quite a large one", the guide says, helpfully adding that in Auckland there is "a 10 per cent chance of [that] occurring in the next 50 years".

As well as buildings falling on you and silt squirting up your trouser legs at that end of town, there's the added risk of death by tsunami.

Bizarro Earth

Solomon Islands - Earthquake Magnitude 6.6

SOlomon Islands quake_060311
© USGSEarthquake Location
Date-Time:
Monday, March 07, 2011 at 00:09:38 UTC

Monday, March 07, 2011 at 11:09:38 AM at epicenter

Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones

Location:
10.334°S, 160.739°E

Depth:
37.9 km (23.6 miles)

Region:
SOLOMON ISLANDS

Distances:
127 km (78 miles) W of Kira Kira, San Cristobal, Solomon Isl.

135 km (83 miles) SE of HONIARA, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands

176 km (109 miles) S of Auki, Malaita, Solomon Islands

2064 km (1282 miles) NNE of BRISBANE, Queensland, Australia

Bizarro Earth

Hawaii: Lava spews 65 feet high after crater collapse

Kilauea, Volcano
© Tim Wright - APLava flows on the Pu'u O'o crater on Kilauea Volcano on Sunday, March 6, 2011 in Hawaii. Scientists say the Pu'u O'o crater floor has collapsed and an eruption occurred along the middle of Kilauea Volcano's east rift zone. Scientists at the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory say after a fissure broke out around 5 p.m. Saturday, lava was seen erupting up to 65 feet high.
A new vent has opened at one of the world's most active volcanoes, sending lava shooting up to 65 feet high, scientists at Kilauea volcano said Sunday.

The Hawaiian Volcano Observatory said the fissure eruption was spotted shortly after the floor at the Pu'u O'o crater collapsed around 5 p.m. Saturday. It occurred along the middle of Kilauea's east rift zone, about 2 miles west of Pu'u O'o.

"As a volcanogist, this is what we do. These are the moments we wait for," volcanogist Janet Babb told KHON2. "It is exciting to see an eruption begin particularly if you can see it from the very start."