Earth Changes
Volgograd investigators establish the circumstances of the death of a one-year-old child.
The kid died as a result of a dog's attack, the representative of the regional ICR Directorate Nataliya Rudnik said, Interfax reports. According to her, the boy lived in one of the settlements of the Nekhaevsky district of the Volgograd region with his parents.
"Today around noon, he independently went out into the courtyard of the household and headed to the neighboring plot, where the dog was on a leash," she explained. According to her, the dog attacked the child. The cries of the baby were heard by the mother, who was engaged in household chores.
Adrieanna O'shea had remained hospitalized since the afternoon of Aug. 23, when five dogs attacked her on Crescent Drive.
A witness told deputies O'shea had returned to the witness' home to retrieve her purse after she had left it there the night before, according to an incident report from the Knox County Sheriff's Office. The witness said she was inside her home when she heard O'shea call one of the dogs by name and scream, "Help me!"
The witness said she ran to the door and saw five dogs attacking O'shea, tossing her in the air and dragging her toward a wooded area, the report states.
Just when it seems like there's nothing left to burn, some of the fires in Bolivia have reignited in places already blackened. The firefighters, mostly made up of trained volunteers, are battling on multiple fronts.
In some areas of the forest, there are still hundreds of fires, some of which have reactivated. That's why the firefighters work at night, when it's much easier to see the embers and make sure they're fully extinguished. It's hot, the air is full of ash and smoke, and the ground is so hot you can feel it coming through your shoes.
Wielding machetes and shovels and water hoses, they douse the smoking remains.
"We're trying to reduce the fires to a minimum but they are still what we call a category 3, which is relatively strong in this area," said one fireman.

Vines badly burnt by the sun and heat in a vineyard in Sussargues, southern France, at the end of June.
In its second estimate for 2019, the ministry forecast production of 43.4 million hectolitres, down from 49.4 million in 2018 when output had benefited from good weather condition.
Last month the farm ministry put French output in 2019 in a range of 42.8 million to 46.4 million hectolitres.
A hectolitre (100 litres) is the equivalent of about 133 standard wine bottles.
In many vineyards, flowering occurred in rainy and cold weather, while heat and hail have also contributed to a decline in production potential, the ministry said in a note.
However, the situation will vary by region.
Record-breaking heatwaves in June and July affected some regions in the south, such as the Gard, Herault or Var, causing burns on the grapes and production losses, it said.
Uganda Red Cross said landslides and flooding had affected several areas of Bulambuli District, including Nabiwutulu, Gimadu Bugatiisa and Buluganya from 27 August, adding, "Our response team is on ground to conduct assessment, establish magnitude of the disaster and the needs of the people affected."
Local media reported that 5 people were missing, feared dead, after landslides buried houses and flooding from the River Kajere. Uganda Red Cross confirmed that 1 person had died in Bukhatisi village, Bulago sub county in Bulambuli District.
The incident took place in the Chohara region in the Kayath Thatch meadows in Sandashi panchayat.
The shepherds were camping in the open when lightning struck them. They have asked the government to be compensated in some way for the loss.
The state has been experiencing dry weather in most parts while some areas have had thundershowers.
Farmers in Sudi were in great sorrow following the incident. Lightning struck the sheep at Bhujawada pasture land following incessant rainfall.
Rearing sheep has been a major income source for the farmers of Karnali. Mahabir Rawat, a local of the village said that sheep belonging to Nunilal Rawat, Lal Bahadur Rawat, Jayalal Rawat, Banche Rawat and Dev Bahadur Rawat, were killed in lightning.
Guardian claiming a plant in the UK hasn't reproduced in 60 million years but has begun to grow both male and female cones because of climate change, but the last inter-glacial 130,000 years prior was 2-3C warmer than today. Brazilian rain-forest losses far greater in 1995, 2004-2005 than today by a factor of 4X.
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Meteorologist Dakota Smith shared the footage on Twitter and explained that the flashes seen in the storm's inner core are "associated with deep convection that kicked off after sunset."
Smith also shared footage of the hurricane taken at sunrise, after it had intensified, explaining it would "soon become a powerful major hurricane." He then showed the eye of the storm as it formed. "A sure sign it's getting stronger," he said.
Comment: Hurricane Dorian: Florida declares state of emergency as it awaits storm's arrival
UPDATE: Dorian is expected to pass over the Abaco Islands and Grand Bahama today, heading for Florida's east cost.
The National Hurricane Center (NHC) upgraded Dorian to Category 5 on Sunday, placing it in the highest category on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale. Sustained winds of 160mph (257 kph) are expected, with the power to cause irreparable damage to all but the most reinforced concrete and steel structures.
Think of them as sprites on steroids: Gigantic Jets are lightning-like discharges that spring from the tops of thunderstorms, reaching all the way to the edge of space. They're enormous and powerful.
"Shen definitely caught a Gigantic Jet," confirms Oscar van der Velde of the Lightning Research Group at the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. "It looks like it may have reached as high as 90 km above the ground."
"Gigantic Jets are much more rare than sprites," says van der Velde. "While sprites were discovered in 1989 and have since been photographed by the thousands, it was not until 2001-2002 that Gigantic Jets were first recorded from Puerto Rico and Taiwan." Only dozens of Gigantic Jets have ever been photographed.
Comment: Wiki details the difference between a blue jet and a gigantic jet:
Gigantic jetsSee also:
Where blue jets are believed to initiate between the upper positive charge region and a negative screening layer directly above this region, Gigantic jets appear to initiate between the upper positive and lower negative charge regions in the thundercloud. In a similar process to how blue jets form, the higher charge region is discharged by the leader network before the same occurs in the lower charge region, and one end of the leader network propagates upward from the cloud toward the ionosphere. Gigantic jets reach higher altitudes than blue jets, and the upper portion of the jet changes color from blue to red.
- Strange but beautiful skies: Noctilucent 'tornado' cloud, auroras, double and twin rainbow plus a midnight rainbow
- Strange skies: Red Sprites in Oklahoma, aurora Steve in Canada, iridescent clouds in Illinois and noctilucent clouds in Denmark
- Our changing atmosphere: Stunning iridescent cloud over Mexico, complex solar halo over Russia and a triple rainbow over Norway
- Changing atmosphere: Red sprites and a blue jet seen above Europe's stormy skies












Comment: World on fire: Five times more wildfires are burning in southern Africa than in Brazil