Earth Changes
Reuters relays that the flow line was connected to four wells and Shell's Brutus platform, which floats in seas that are about a half-mile deep in the Green Canyon area of the Gulf. While it is believed that the sheen came from a release of oil from sub-sea infrastructure, authorities are still investigating the cause of the incident.
Activists aren't letting the oil company off easy, however. Shell may have shut down all wells that flow to the Brutus platform and dispatched five boats to clean up oil that can be skimmed off the surface of the Gulf, but the recent leak has infuriated environmentalists. According to ABC News, they're using the disaster as a prime example of why offshore drilling should be banned.

A man hoses down smouldering patches of scorched earth in Battambang province after a fire ripped through a flooded forest.
Prek Toal forms the "core area" of the Tonle Sap biosphere, an area some experts have called the single most important breeding ground for water fowl in Southeast Asia.
"In 16 years of patrolling, I have never seen a fire like this," said one Environment Ministry ranger who declined to be named as he was not authorised to speak to the press. The men, who have been divided into three teams, are trying to contain a fast-moving fire on difficult terrain.
Suspected negligence started the fire in early April and it has since spread across the wetlands thanks to exceptionally dry conditions related to the El Niño-induced drought, climate change and yet-to-be-understood changes of the Tonle Sap flood cycle.
For the past 10 days, the conflagration has come within hundreds of metres of Prek Toal village, and on Wednesday, a column of smoke loomed over the floating settlement.
Five persons were killed as lightning struck when they were working at a brick kiln at Rashiya Panchyat under Thakurganj block of Kishanganj district, Sub-Divisional Officer Mohammad Shafique said.
The five included a father-son duo, the SDO said, adding all five were brick kiln labourers.
The next of the kin of the victims will be given Rs four lakh each as ex gratia, the SDO said.
In two other incidents of lightning in Katihar, three persons, including two minors, died, while two other minors sustained burn injuries in different villages.
On Wednesday, the volcano alert level for the mountain was raised to Level 2 (moderate to heightened unrest), and the aviation colour code changed from green to yellow, with authorities warning climbers and hikers to avoid the 2-kilometre area surrounding the volcanic crater.
"There are more signs of life at the volcano," volcanologist Brad Scott from GNS Science told National Geographic. "Recent visits to the volcano have confirmed an increase in the output of volcanic gas."
On top of the gas, a swarm of tremors were recorded on the mountain in April, and the crater's lake has been steadily rising in temperature since last month, increasing from 25 degrees Celsius (77 degrees Fahrenheit) to 46 degrees Celsius (115 degrees Fahrenheit).
The Interior Ministry said in a statement that a jet ski of citizen Saad Khaled Al-Shereeda broke down and a coastguard boat was dispatched to rescue him.
The ministry added that the coastguard diver, Abdullah Othman Al-Doussary, jumped in the water to help the man, but they were both struck by lightning and were killed instantly.
In October last year, an Asian was killed by lightning in northern Kuwait during a freak storm. It is estimated that 6,000 to as many as 24,000 people are killed around the world by lightning strikes every year.
He said thunderbolts claimed 18 lives and injured 16 others, as strong winds killed 8 and injured 71 others, he said.
Besides the human casualties, strong winds had devastated more than 3,000 houses in 20 cities and provinces across Cambodia, he added.
"I'd like to call on people, especially those in rural areas, to be vigilant over lighting and strong wind," he said.
"To avoid the dangers from lightning strikes, people should stay in houses when there are torrential rains."
The latest incident occurred late Wednesday in northeastern Stung Treng province, killing four people, three of them killed by lightning strikes and one by strong wind.
Source: Xinhua
Most of the victims were farmer working in their fields, though children playing in the open and spectators at a soccer game have also died in lightning strikes. Mohammad Riaz Ahmed, chief of Bangladesh's disaster management department, tells Voice of America that authorities are "very concerned" by the number of lightning deaths. More than 90 have died so far this year and the storm season hasn't peaked yet. In the US, there were 27 recorded lightning deaths in 2015 and there have been five so far this year, according to the NOAA.
People hoping to catch a glimpse of monarch butterflies this spring will have to look a little harder because a harsh, late winter storm in Mexico may have wiped out up to 50 per cent of the butterfly's population.
Rain, sleet and snow ravaged over-wintering colonies in Mexico on March 8 and 9, leaving butterflies frozen to trees and dead on the ground.
Lingering effects of the storm aren't yet known for sure, but experts are preparing for plummeting numbers.
"Right now, it certainly looks like it's going to be a much lower population. It doesn't look particularly good," warned Chip Taylor, a professor in the department of ecology and evolutionary biology at the University of Kansas and founder and director of Monarch Watch.
Monarch Watch described the storm that affected nine colonies in Mexico as "unprecedented."
There is no firm count of the monarchs that died in the storm. Estimates range wildly from three to 50 per cent because monarchs had already started their journey north.
In a telephone interview, Namtumbo District Commissioner, Chande Nalicho confirmed the incident, saying the incident occurred on Tuesday at around 10am local time.
He said: "Before the incident, the man who was identified as Yassin Kalimoni was on his farm.
"He saw elephant herd coming in his direction and he tried to chase them but the jumbos became furious and attacked him to death."
According to the DC, the wildlife officials were in the area, so that they chase them to the game reserve.
Nalicho cited increasing poaching incidents were the reasons for the jumbos to run away from protected areas to residential areas.
A necropsy conducted by biologists with the Cascadia Research Collaborative confirmed what scientists observed when they assessed the whale a couple of days before it died. At the time, they suspected the animal was suffering from an infection or a collapsed lung that had filled its chest cavity with air, which would have made the animal too buoyant to dive.
Jessie Huggins, the group's stranding coordinator, said Friday they still don't know what caused all that air to build up in the whale's chest. It could be a previous traumatic injury, disease or both, she said. Tests of tissue samples may provide more information.













