Earth Changes
At 200-feet across, and 2000-feet down, it will take several days to figure out what caused the slide, and for the land to stop moving. South King County deputies say they'll be monitoring the area throughout the night, and more evacuations are possible. "They just seem to start, and bang, it's gone and it's over and you do what can to shore yourself up," Porter said. The area was already considered a "sensitive critical area," officials said. There have been smaller slides in the past, but nothing as extreme as Friday's slide. "We knew this wasn't something usual, wasn't a normal event," Elisa Dawn Harrison said. Harrison was at the park below when she caught part of the slide on camera. "I just feel bad for anyone who has to go through this." No injuries were reported, but the community worries what may come next. The back deck slid down a hill, and trees and dirt continued to fall down to the beach below. Crews were at the scene to assess the risk of further damage, Bellinghausen said. - Seattle Times
The tremor struck at 1:34 am local time on Saturday, with the epicenter located 83 miles (133 km) ENE of Iraklion, Crete, Greece.
There are no reported casualties but the quake was strong enough to worry locals in Crete and the neighboring Greek islands.
Earthquakes have historically caused widespread damage across central and southern Greece, Cyprus, Sicily and other neighboring regions. Last year a series of strong earthquakes on the island of Kefalonia damaged hundreds of homes and injured more than a dozen people.

A group of wild Asian Elephants forage inside a corn field in Pu'er, south China's Yunnan Province.
The improvement in ecological environment in recent years has largely stimulated the growth of wild Asian elephants, China's first-grade state protection animal. However, lacking enough food supplies and habitats, the wild Asian elephants are forced to flee to local farmland, inevitably causing damage to property.
In the past five years there were 37, 512 cases of wild elephant attacks with 54 casualties in Pu'er, south China's Yunnan Province.
Professor Chen Mingyong from the School of Life Sciences at Yunnan University said that failing to provide adequate food and habitats by local governments has attributed to the frequent wild elephant attacks.
Also many local governments were unable to compensate the victims promptly due to budget constraints and their unclear responsibilities defined by related law.
One of the tornadoes originated near Tulsa before shredding through a mobile home park near Sand Springs. One person was killed during the event and several others were injured, with fire departments and rescue workers currently combing through the grounds and seeking any wounded survivors.
"Right now, rescue efforts are continuing and officers are aiding the injured and helping those who need immediate medical care," Maj. Shannon Clark of the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office said to CNN.
Reports suggest that almost the entire park and its 50 mobile homes were destroyed by the tornado, though the amount of damage done to each home varies, local News On 6 reported. Of the three people confirmed to be injured, two of them are in critical condition.

The elephant that killed its mahout being tethered to a tree at Chalingadu in Thrissur on Thursday
This is the third such killing by captive elephants in the state in less than a week. Earlier, two people, including a mahout, were crushed to death by rampaging elephants in Alappuzha.
In the latest incident, the tusker 'Pallathu Vijayalakshmanan' turned violent and killed its mahout Sivasankaran, 64, of Poovathinkal, Kinasherry, during a temple festival at Kaipamangalam. According to police, the elephant turned violent when the man atop the elephant was trying to climb down along with the 'kolam'.
Comment: See also these similar recent reports: Second mahout to be killed by elephant within 5 days in Kerala, India
Elephant kills mahout in India
Temple mutt elephant tramples mahout to death in India
At 1:24 a.m., a garbage truck from Industrial Waste Management got stuck in a 4-by-2 foot sinkhole on Woodland Avenue between Lembeck and Greenville avenues, a police report says.
The blizzard that began during the night and built up during the morning had dumped more than 40 centimeters of snow on the southern coastal town of Arendal by midday. Some areas reported more than 60 centimeters and it was still coming down. Streets that did get cleared were covered with slippery snow again within minutes.
At Oslo's main airport at Gardermoen, the snow was falling so thick and fast that the airport's army of plows were out in force trying to keep the runways clear, but without much luck. "And when we have plows on the runways, planes can't land or take off," airport spokesman Joachim Wester Andersen told Norwegian Broadcasting (NRK).
Several startled people reported the loud booms, heard around 3pm, on social media.
The bizarre occurrence has sparked a frenzy of speculation, with conspiracy theories doing the rounds over what might have caused the strange sounds.
Many believe the bang could have been caused by a sonic boom due to jet planes speeding through the sky and breaking the sound barrier.
But whatever the cause, people described it as loud enough to shake their homes and rattle windows.
Lisa Evenden wrote on Twitter: "In Tavistock our house shook like mad & long loud boom."
Trendspot added: "There was the most enormous bang over #Tintagel at 3pm. Sonic boom at sea level?"
Another going by the name of Frankie, wrote: "Very loud over North Petherwin near Launceston too!"












Comment: The accumulation of cometary dust in the Earth's atmosphere influences the frequency and intensity of weather phenomenon, especially tornados, hurricanes, cyclones, rainfall, snowfall and lightning, as they are all manifestations of the same electric phenomenon at different scales or levels of power.
For more information and to better understand how weather works:Earth Changes and the Human-Cosmic Connection, Pierre Lescaudron
FYI: Tornado Safety