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Fri, 29 Oct 2021
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Attention

Dead humpback whale found on Admiralty Island, Alaska

Dan Kirkwood of Pack Creek Bear Tours takes photos the humpback whale carcass that washed ashore Admiralty Island on the backside of Douglas Island on Thursday, May 31, 2018.
© Riley Woodford
Dan Kirkwood of Pack Creek Bear Tours takes photos the humpback whale carcass that washed ashore Admiralty Island on the backside of Douglas Island on Thursday, May 31, 2018.
A humpback whale has washed up dead on Admiralty Island across from Douglas Island, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association. It's not clear yet how the whale died or if it was struck by a vessel.

NOAA spokesperson Julie Speegle said the carcass has most recently been spotted on the beach at Point Young, which juts out from Admiralty Island into Stephens Passage on the backside of Douglas. NOAA believes the whale carcass has come to rest there after being beached in other places.

"It's on the beach pretty high up and we don't anticipate it will refloat, so at this point it's not a hazard to navigation," Speegle said.

Cloud Lightning

Three women killed by lightning bolt as heavy storms hit southern China

lightning
Three women have died after being struck by lightning as extreme storms struck southern China, according to an online news portal.

The women from Baise city in Guangxi autonomous region, died instantly after being struck on Wednesday afternoon, Thepaper.cn reported on Thursday.

The report said they were on top of a mountain at Dongmen Forest Farm in Pingshun village just outside the city when they were struck.

No other information about the incident was given.

Cloud Precipitation

Storm Alberto delivers deadly floods and landslides to North Carolina

House collapse in Watauga County North Carolina, USA, after heavy rainfall from Storm Alberto, May 2018.
© Boone Police Department
House collapse in Watauga County North Carolina, USA, after heavy rainfall from Storm Alberto, May 2018.
After making landfall as a Subtropical Storm near Laguna Beach in Florida on 28 May, Alberto has continued to move north as a Subtropical Depression, bringing heavy rain to areas that had already seen one of the wettest Mays on record.

As of 31 May, 2018, North Carolina was by far the worst hit state. Flooding has affected areas of Alabama and Georgia, as well as parts of Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois, South Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia.


Sun

Icy clouds provide easel for brilliant sun halos over northwest Washington

Sun dogs in NW WA
© Zach Heistand
If you were up early Wednesday morning, you might have been treated to a rather brilliant show in the skies near the sun.

Photos from around the region showed a rather bright halo around the sun, with stunning sun dogs flanking either side and even a tangent arc on the top.

The halos are caused by the ice crystals in those thin, high clouds. The sunlight gets refracted by those ice crystals, making the colors of the rainbow.


Attention

Blue whale seen in the Red Sea for the first time

The blue whale spotted off Eilat, May 29, 2018.
© Omri Omessi
The blue whale spotted off Eilat, May 29, 2018.
A blue whale has been seen in the Red Sea for the first time ever, Egypt's Environment Ministry announced Thursday.

In a statement, the ministry said it was "following with great interest the very first appearance of a blue whale in the Gulf of Aqaba in the Red Sea".

The largest animal on earth, blue whales can reach up to 30 meters (98 feet) in length and can weigh up to 180 tons.

The International Union for the Conservation of Nature has designated the blue whale as an "endangered species".


Comment: Other reports over the last 4 years of certain whale species turning up where they are not usually encountered, include:


Cloud Precipitation

The deadly Banquao Dam failure of 1975 and how extreme rainfall in the US has been rising since 1990

Banqiao Dam
© Wikimedia Commons.
An aerial view of the Banqiao Dam following its failure as a result of mainland China's greatest 24-hour rainfall, which took place in Henan Province during the passage of Typhoon Nina in early August 1975. As many as 230,000 perished as a result of the dam collapse.
In early August 1975, Typhoon Nina made landfall along the coast of China near Shanghai. The storm weakened as it moved inland and merged with a cold front that straddled Henan Province (in central China), resulting in the development of a series of near-stationary thunderstorms in and around the town of Linzhuang. The greatest short-term rainfall event in modern Chinese records ensued: some 1060 mm (41.73") of rain fell in just 24 hours. The Banqiao Dam on the Ru River near Linzhuang, failed as a result of the rains and collapsed on August 7-8, sending a wave some 6 miles wide and 10-23 feet deep across the plains below. As a result some 100,000-230,000 people perished. By some accounts, this makes Typhoon Nina the fourth-deadliest tropical storm in modern world history.

The wide range in fatality estimates is because many of the deaths occurred as a result of famine and disease following the flood itself. The exact figures for each source of fatalities remains obscure. If the high-end figure of 230,000 is correct, then the event would rank as not only the fourth-deadliest tropical storm on record but perhaps the sixth-deadliest natural disaster of any kind since 1900. The caveat to these kinds of listings, however, is that when tremendous numbers like this are involved there are huge discrepancies in the range of fatalities attributed to each event (as was the case with the Banqiao Dam disaster). These discrepancies can be seen in Wikipedia's list of the top 10 deadliest natural disasters since 1900. The list uses the highest estimate for the Banqiao Dam disaster.

Comment: Meanwhile in just the last 12 months:


Cloud Grey

Noctilucent cloud season over the Arctic began May 27th 2018

Noctilucent Clouds Taken by Catalin Tapardel on August 5, 2017 @ Kakwa, Alberta, Canada
© Catalin Tapardel
August 5, 2017 @ Kakwa, Alberta, Canada
NASA's Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere (AIM) spacecraft has spotted its first noctilucent clouds (NLCs) of the 2018 season. They are the electric-blue puffs circled in this image of the Arctic taken by AIM's CIPS instrument on May 27th:
noctilucent clouds may 25th 2018
"The summer season for noctilucent clouds has begun," says Cora Randall, AIM science team member at the University of Colorado. "We spotted the first hint of NLCs in our data on May 23rd; now they are brightening rapidly."

NLCs are Earth's highest clouds. Seeded by meteoroids, they float at the edge of space more than 80 km above the planet's surface. The clouds form when summertime wisps of water vapor waft up and crystallize around specks of meteor smoke.

Comment: Interestingly, it's the 31st of May, but June 15th 2017 Space Weather reported in The mystery of absent noctilucent clouds:
During the first two weeks of June 2017, Spaceweather.com received zero images of NLCs - something that hasn't happened in nearly 20 years.

Where did they go? Researchers have just figured it out: There's been a "heat wave" in the polar mesosphere, a region in Earth's upper atmosphere where NLCs form. Relatively warm temperatures have wiped out the clouds.
So with the unsettling rise in fireballs, one would think the two would increase in tandem, and yet, evidently, our atmosphere isn't behaving as is expected. And perhaps when this year's peak occurs will provide more data on just what's going on up there:


Question

'Very eerie': Strange sound heard in Southampton, UK

Strange sounds in Southampton, UK
© YouTube/Jamie Jones
On April 30, 2018, YouTube user 'Jamie Jones' uploaded a video of 'very, very eerie' sounds she heard in Southampton, UK. She says that the sounds have 'been off and on all day'.


Camcorder

'Strange noise' heard in the skies of Minneapolis, Minnesota

Strange sounds in MN
© YouTube/Melvin Rustin
YouTube user 'Melvin Rustin' heard and recorded a 'strange noise' he heard in the skies of Minneapolis, Minnesota on May 14, 2018.


Bizarro Earth

'Weird trumpet sounds' heard in Bellflower, California skies

Trumpet sounds in CA
© YouTube/Joshua Cesark
On May 11, 2018, YouTube user 'Joshua Cesark' posted a recording of 'trumpeting sounds' he heard in the skies of Bellflower, California.