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Wed, 27 Oct 2021
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Mystery 'heat burst' causes temperature in Lincolnshire, UK to soar by TEN degrees to 32C in just 38 minutes (and at sunset!)

Lightning storm
© Owen Humphreys/PA Wire

The Met Office says the event is highly unusual


Parts of Lincolnshire experienced a ten degree temperature rise in under one hour last night due to a rare atmospheric phenomenon.

The Met Office has said that the so-called 'heat burst' was caused by a thunderstorm collapsing and bringing hot air down to ground level.

This caused the temperature recorded by the Met Office at Donna Nook to increase a staggering 10 degrees in just 38 minutes, jumping from 22C at 8.22pm to 32C just before 9pm.

A spokesperson for the Met Office told Lincolnshire Live: "While heat bursts are not unknown globally, to get that temperature rise so suddenly is much more common in countries with more turbulent weather.

"It doesn't happen very often at all full stop, honestly.

"This sort of weather behaviour is usually seen in regions such as mid-west United States prior to a hurricane or extremely stormy weather."


Comment: While they proffered a possible theory as to what happened, there's no way they could possibly know GIVEN THAT IT WAS THE FIRST TIME SUCH HAD EVER BEEN OBSERVED IN THE UK!

Some people with their instant know-it-all-ism, sheesh!

UK has second hottest day on record


Seismograph

Eight killed and dozens injured after powerful earthquakes hit northern Philippines

Batanes quake damage
© Instagram / Manolo Manuel
At least 8 people have been killed and dozens injured after a series of powerful earthquakes struck the northern Philippines archipelago province of Batanes.

Substantial damage is being reported in Itbayat municipality after two consecutive earthquakes measuring 5.4 and 5.9 struck the region around 4:16am and 7:30am local time, followed by an aftershock. Amid ongoing large scale rescue operations a third quake measuring 5.7 struck the same area at 09:24am.

Eight people were killed and 60 others injured, according to preliminary information from Batanes Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office.


Bizarro Earth

Earth's rotation is slowing - and scientists say it 'could' cause major earthquakes (uhm, it already is)

Slow Earth Rotation - Earthquake
© GETTY
Earth’s rotation is slowing - and it could cause major earthquakes
Earth's rotation is slowing down as the Moon moves farther away from the planet - and scientists believe it could cause major earthquakes.


Comment: It already is causing the increase in seismic activity, be it quakes, volcanic eruptions and outgassing events. That's WHY CO2 levels are increasing, and why the oceans are becoming more acidic...


Earth's rotation is slowing as our planet uses energy to keep the tidal bulge ahead of the Moon's orbit. The Moon's gravity keeps Earth's rotation in check, and to do this the lunar satellite's orbit must be slightly ahead of Earth's. As the Moon attempts to regulate Earth's rotation and slow it down, the Moon moves slowly away.

According to Matthew Funke, solar system ambassador for NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, who wrote on Q+A website Quora: "The Moon's gravity creates a tidal bulge on the Earth. This bulge attempts to rotate at the same speed as the rest of the planet.

"As it moves 'ahead' of the Moon, the Moon attempts to pull it back. This slows the Earth's rotation down.

Comment: Billions of years in the future! LOL! In the same breadth they insist climate change is happening NOW!

Earth to climate scientists: THE TWO THINGS ARE CONNECTED!

Check this out from 2014:

Volcanoes are erupting all over the place right now. Scientists have figured out why: A minute slowdown in the planet's rotation


Blue Planet

Over 100 wildfires burning across Arctic region have generated smoke plumes visible from space

arctic wildfires
© NASA Earth Observatory / Joshua Stevens
An unprecedented number of wildfires have been ravaging the Arctic for weeks following the hottest June ever recorded on Earth. Now, the fires are so huge and intense, the smoke can literally be seen from space.

Satellite images show more than 100 long-lived wildfires with huge plumes of swirling black smoke covering most of the Arctic Circle including parts of Russia, Siberia, Greenland and Alaska.

The wildfires have now reached "unprecedented levels," according to Mark Parrington of the EU's Copernicus Emergency Management Service, who said the smoke vortex is covering a "mind boggling" two million square kilometers.


Wildfires are burning across 11 regions in Russia with the largest covering Irkutsk, Krasnoyarsk and Buryatia. Likely caused by lightning strikes, as of July 22 they have burned 320 square miles (829 square kilometers), 150 square miles (388 square km) and 41 square miles (106 square km) in the regions, respectively, according to NASA's Earth Observatory.

Comment: It's not that warm in the Arctic.

No, the significant factor behind them is likely to be the 'accelerant' provided by increased outgassings of methane and CO2, in part due to increased seismic activity. Lightning, which is also on the rise, provides the spark. Then the fires themselves produce lots more CO2.

Like, vastly more than humans can produce.

The smoke and other particulates the fires produce are joined by increased dust from increased meteors and increased volcanic eruptions, which all then jointly contribute to the increased dust-load in the atmosphere, which changes its electric charge rebalancing mechanisms, producing more intense storms and precipitation in the form of record rainfall, hail, lightning strikes, etc.

Notice that man-made activity is nowhere to be seen in this naturally intensifying feedback loop...

We're just along for the ride.


Cloud Precipitation

Extreme times: Two days after cyclists raced in record-breaking heat, Tour de France halted by hailstorm and mudslides

tour de france hailstorm
© Reuters / Christian Hartmann | Gonzalo Fuentes
The 19th stage of the 2019 Tour de France has been brought to a standstill after a torrential hailstorm forced the race to be cut short during the riders' journey from Saint-Jean-De-Maurienne to Tignes.

The hail on the route was so bad it forced race organizers to call a premature stop to the stage before the riders reached the treacherous conditions.

The official Twitter account of the race alerted fans, saying: "The day's course has been called due to adverse weather conditions, rider times have been taken at Col de l'Iseran."


Cloud Precipitation

Before latest record high temperatures: Dutch province Zuid-Holland battered by hail

hail zuid-holland
© Mustafa Ibrisimovic/RTL Nieuws
Mustafa Ibrisimovic from Overschie, a neighborhood of Rotterdam, found these hailstones in his garden.
Before the heatwave spread across the country, the Dutch province of Zuid-Holland was battered by hailstones the size of ping pong balls. On Saturday, July 20th, the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI) issued a code orange for the Province Zuid-Holland, indicating a "high risk of dangerous or extreme weather of which the impact is large, with a risk of damage, injury or excessive discomfort". While the heavy hailstorm didn't last long, it caused quite an upheaval: Trees were uprooted, cars were damaged, roof windows were broken, and small flash floods appeared in people's backyards and in the streets. The hailstones had a diameter of 2 to 4 cm.

See below for a collection of pictures and videos with description:

Comment: Around the same time a hailstorm made its way through parts of the Netherlands, hailstones the size of baseballs pounded Minnesota, Wisconsin, US: Cars damaged by baseball-sized hail as severe storms pound Minnesota, Wisconsin


Attention

Terrifying moment motorcyclist and passenger plunge into flash flood after bridge collapses in Cambodia

A spokesman from the Srok Pang district police station told local media today the soldiers' bodies have yet to be recovered

A spokesman from the Srok Pang district police station told local media today the soldiers' bodies have yet to be recovered
This is the terrifying moment two motorcyclists were swept away after a bridge collapsed during a flash flood.

Kinak DaLi and Sok Vandy, soldiers from the 1st Light Infantry Division, were riding over the crossing made from logs and mud when it gave way due to the force of the river below.

They both plunged some 10ft into the torrent of water and have been missing since the accident yesterday afternoon in Siem Reap Province, Cambodia.


Cloud Precipitation

Bangladesh flood death toll reaches 104

Bangladesh's Flood Forecasting and
© AFP
Bangladesh's Flood Forecasting and Warning Centre said at least 26 of the country's 64 districts have been flooded
The death toll from monsoon storms in Bangladesh rose above 100 Friday with flood levels still rising in many parts of the country, officials said.

About 20 people have died in 48 hours, taking the toll to 104, making it one of the worst monsoons in years, officials said. Most victims have drowned but some have been killed by landslides, snake bites and lightning strikes.

Five girls aged between six and 18 drowned when their boat capsized in a flood torrent in the northern district of Jamalpur on Thursday, district administrator Ahmed Kabir told AFP.


Comment: Over 5 million affected by monsoon floods in Bangladesh


Attention

Mexico's El Popo volcano spews smoke and ash

Popocatepetl volcano

Popocatepetl volcano
Mexico's Popocatepetl volcano unleashed a powerful explosion on Wednesday (July 24) morning, spewing ash and smoke into the morning sky. Rough cut - no reporter narration.


Cloud Grey

Tourists flee as volcano near Indonesian city of Bandung erupts for first time in 6 years

The disaster mitigation agency said the tourism spot had been closed and the alert status of the volcano was being evaluated.
© BNPB INDONESIA
The disaster mitigation agency said the tourism spot had been closed and the alert status of the volcano was being evaluated.
A volcano erupted near Indonesia's third-biggest city of Bandung on Friday (July 26), sending ash several hundred metres into the air and triggering warnings for people to stay away.

Broadcasters showed footage of cars and motorbikes driving away from Tangkuban Parahu on roads covered by ash.

The disaster mitigation agency said the tourism spot had been closed and the alert status of the volcano was being evaluated.