Earth Changes
Tulsa County and state experts say severe weather is to blame.
Officials speculate lightning and thunder scared the birds out of the trees, causing them to either fly or be blown back into trees and buildings. Most of the birds were found near a local Walmart. Experts are also speculating the birds were so soaked with rain, they died from hypothermia.
State wildlife experts say bird die-offs are common after severe weather.
They also say there is no threat of disease from the dead birds.
Three systems are brewing in the Atlantic with decent potential for becoming tropical storms over the weekend, the National Hurricane Center said Friday.
The system closest to North America has the highest chance - 60 percent of turning into a tropical storm within 48 hours - but poses little threat and is likely to be short-lived, the Weather Channel reported.
It was about 200 miles north of Bermuda on Friday afternoon, when it became a tropical depression - one level before tropical storm.
Two systems farther out in the Atlantic have 40 and 50 percent chances, and could impact Caribbean islands by next week.
A fourth system closer to the U.S. East Coast was given a 20 percent chance of turning into a tropical storm within 48 hours.
Private forecaster accuweather.com reported earlier this week that it expected at least three named storms by Aug. 25. The next names to be used for the Atlantic season are Franklin, Gert and Harvey.
The Atlantic season has already provided five named storms but none were very severe.
Accuweather.com expert Paul Pastelok attributed the lack of severity to "disruptive areas of wind shear and pockets of dry air lurking about the Atlantic."
"These two inhibiting factors have minimized the intensity of tropical systems to date this year and may continue to govern the intensity of future storms over the next couple of weeks," accuweather.com stated.
The mercury has risen above 35 degrees centigrade (95 degrees Fahrenheit) for three days in a row in much of Japan, where the thermostats of most air-conditioners have been turned down to reduce electricity consumption.
More than two-thirds of Japan's nuclear reactors are offline five months after the March 11 quake and tsunami sparked the world's worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl 25 years ago at the Fukushima Daiichi plant.
Four people died of heat stroke on Thursday -- two farmers, a security guard and a construction worker -- said the Asahi daily.
More than 900 people have been taken to hospital with heatstroke symptoms, including about 20 in serious condition, said the Kyodo News agency.
They have been able to back feed service to restore power, but it may take them a while to rebuild the substation, which was totally flattened. The Cooperative's Terry Rubenthaler says there was so much damage, that they may never be able to tell what destroyed it. They will be evaluating the situation and then deciding how to proceed with repairs.
Forecasters warn a major storm is about to be unleashed across much of the country.
Frigid Antarctic air has left the Ross Ice Shelf and is heading for the South Island.
Bitter weather could hit Canterbury between tomorrow afternoon and Wednesday, when snow flurries to low levels and cold southerly winds may ease.
However, snow and ice are likely to be a problem all week, with heavy frosts likely to stop the snow melting as quickly as it did after last month's fall.
MetService and Blue Skies Weather predict that gales and heavy snow will combine to cause chaos for Canterbury farmers, workers, schools, motorists and travellers over the next few days, with up to 20 centimetres settling close to sea level, 40cm on Banks Peninsula and inland, and more than 50cm above about 200m by Wednesday.
Right now scientists are building such a network off the Oregon coast. People often see the devastating images of earthquakes taken from the land, but there's little information available about where many of these earthquakes originate.

Thick cloud cover briefly fell away to reveal this first image of icebergs breaking away from the Sulzberger Ice Shelf due to sea swell from the Tohoku Tsunami, which had originated 8,000 miles away about 18 hours earlier. The icebergs can be seen behind a thin layer of clouds just off the ice shelf near the center of the image
Kelly Brunt, a cryosphere specialist at Goddard Space Flight Center, and her colleagues were able to link the calving of icebergs from the Sulzberger Ice Shelf in Antarctica following tsunami that sent waves 8,100 miles away.
The finding is presented in details in a paper published in the Journal of Glaciology. It is the first direct observation of its kind, said NASA.
Japan's powerful magnitude-9.0 earthquake killed more than 20,000 people and caused more than $230 billion in damages, according to the World Bank. The tsunami also damaged the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima prefecture, making it the worst nuclear disaster since Chernobyl in 1986 in Ukraine.
The 6.0-magnitude earthquake at 10.56 a.m. local time (0256 GMT) was centered less than a kilometer (mile) from the western coast of Dalupiri Island, which is part of the Babuyan Islands in the Luzon Strait north of Luzon island in the Philippines. It struck about 113 kilometers (70 miles) deep, making it an earthquake of intermediate depth, according to the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS).
There were no immediate reports of damage or casualties from the area, which is mostly uninhabited. The United States Geological Survey (USGS) measured the earthquake at only 5.4 on the Richter scale but at a much shallower depth of just 20 kilometers (12 miles).
The Philippines is on the so-called 'Pacific Ring of Fire', an arc of fault lines circling the Pacific Basin which is prone to frequent and large earthquakes. Volcanic eruptions also occur frequently in the region.
The quake hit 40 kilometres from the border and was centred 34 km (21 miles) NE (44°) from Ensenada, 45 km (28 miles) NNE (25°) from Maneadero, 59 km (36 miles) SSE (155°) from Tecate, and 78 km (49 miles) SE (128°) from Tijuana (all Baja California, Mexico).
The earthquake was recorded at a shallow depth of 11.3 km (7.0 miles). It was followed six hours later by a magnitude 2.6 earth tremor.
USGS information on earthquake HERE
The eruption was described as a "slow effusion of magma that is forming a lava dome" by John Power, the scientist-in-charge at the Alaska Volcano Observatory.
Along with the quiet nature of the eruption, the remote siting of the volcano has so far kept the hazard level low.











