Earth ChangesS

Cloud Lightning

Flood warnings in Scotland as up to three inches of rain are forecast in the west

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© Unknown
Gloomy July is set to get gloomier - with more flood warnings in the Central Belt and the south of Scotland. The Met Office warned the west can expect up to three inches of rain, with half an inch in the east. Government forecasters said up to two inches' rain had already fallen yesterday in south-west Scotland. The Scottish Environment Protection Agency are expected to issue flood alerts.

Scotland's sunshine is down more than 50 per cent this month at just 34 hours - around two hours a day - on course to beat 1931's record low of 84 hours. Maximum temperatures average just 15.2C, down 1.7C on the usual - and on track for one of the top 10 coldest ever Julys and the coldest since 1993's 14.8C. Records began in 1910.

Rainfall is more than treble the usual in parts, with Midlothian on course for one of its wettest Julys after being soaked by 106mm of rain.

Igloo

Amsterdam Experiences the Coldest Summer in 25 Years

Pedestrian
© Amsterdam City Tour.com
If you're planning to travel to Amsterdam this summer, be prepared... it's cold in the Netherlands!

At the summer's halfway point, the maximum temperature had only reached a measly 15.7 degrees Celsius. It hasn't been that cold this time of year since 1987.

With just half a month to go before the official end of summer, we are starting to see some warmer temperatures and the sun seems slightly less afraid to show its face. In June, we saw an average of 94 millimeters of rain, 26 millimeters more than normal for this time of year.

So, when packing your suitcase, make sure to include an umbrella and some wellies. Layers are also best for this type of weather so you can add or take off clothing pieces as necessary.

This is the perfect weather to check out some of Amsterdam's fantastic museums, restaurants and shops, many of which have been covered in past entries on the blog.

And with half the summer left, there's always a chance for better weather in the days ahead.

Cloud Lightning

40 ton tree weakened from recent storms crushes driver on Georgetown Pike

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© Fairfax County PolicePolice respond after a fallen tree on Georgetown Pike killed one person Tuesday evening.
Great Falls, Virginia - One lane of Georgetown Pike in Great Falls is now open after a 40-ton tree crushed a 2008 Mercedes CL600, killing the driver Tuesday evening. Traffic is alternating directions. WTOP Traffic still recommends Route 7 as an alternative. Traffic along Georgetown Pike/Va. 193 between Springvale Road and Walker Road completely shut down after the tree came down around 6:45 p.m. Tuesday.


Video

Incredible moment a Canadian news crew narrowly escaped devastating landslide while investigating another earlier landslide

A Canadian news crew investigating a deadly landslide was caught off-guard when another large slide struck Johnsons Landing, British Columbia on Friday.


Cloud Lightning

Thunderstorms expected as Toronto sets heat record

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© Joh Rieti/CBC
Toronto is under a severe thunderstorm watch after setting a new high-temperature mark for the year.

As of 3 p.m., the temperature in the city was 36.4 C, which broke the previous record of 36.3 C that was set earlier this summer, reported CBC meteorologist Michelle Leslie.

Environment Canada says that the temperature could still reach 37 C on Tuesday. The agency has also issued a severe thunderstorm watch for the city of Toronto and the surrounding regions of Durham, Halton, Peel and York.

Torontonians are warned of the development of thunderstorms that could bring "large hail, damaging winds or heavy rainfall."

Better Earth

50 Tons of Litter Pulled from Pacific

Turtle In Net
© NOAANOAA divers cut a Hawaiian green sea turtle free from a derelict fishing net during a recent June/July 2012 mission to collect marine debris in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands.
Scientists loaded their ship to the max this month off the coast of Hawaii, but their bounty wasn't fish or coral or any other scientific specimen. It was garbage.

The crew of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) ship Oscar Elton Sette pulled 50 metric tons of marine debris out of the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument off the northwestern Hawaiian Islands last month, part of an ongoing mission since 1996 to clean up the shallow coral reef environment.

"What surprises us is that after many years of marine debris removal in Papahanaumokuakea and more than 700 metric tons of debris later, we are still collecting a significant amount of derelict fishing gear from the shallow coral reefs and shorelines," Kyle Koyanagi, the chief scientist for the mission, said in a NOAA statement. "The ship was at maximum capacity and we did not have any space for more debris."

NOAA has been sending out garbage-removing ships every year since 1996. On the mission that ended Saturday (July 14), 17 scientists cleaned up the coastal waters and shorelines of the Kure Atoll, Midway Atoll, Pearl Atoll, Hermes Atoll, Lisianski Island and Laysan Island, all in the northern section of the Hawaiian Islands.

Attention

Dangerous Levels of Fukushima Radiation on Course to US West Coast

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© Reuters/KyodoTokyo Electric Power Co. (TEPCO)'s tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant is seen in Fukushima prefecture, in this aerial view photo taken by Kyodo
It's been over a year since natural disaster ravaged a nuclear plant in Fukushima and interrupted the lives of millions of Japanese. Scientists now fear though that contaminated water is on course to America, and it could be more toxic than thought.

Researchers have released the findings of an intense study into the aftermath of last year's Fukushima nuclear disaster and warn that the United States isn't exactly spared just yet. In fact, scientists now fear that incredibly contaminated ocean waters could be reaching the West Coast of the US in a matter of only five years, and the toxicity of those waves could eventually be worse than what was seen in Japan.


Comment: In fact West Coast Bluefin tuna has already been found to be contaminated with cesium-137 from Fukushima.


A team of scientists led by Joke F Lรผbbecke of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory have published the findings of an experiment recently conducted to measure the impact of last year's nuclear disaster and the results are eye-opening to say the least. By simulating the spreading of contaminated ocean waters and seeing how currents could carry them across the Pacific from Japan to the US, scientists believe that the worst might be still on the way.

Comment: The article give the impression that the radiation is not posing a problem in the US yet, but nothing could be farther from the truth!
US Deaths from Fukushima Radiation Study
Fukushima Radiation Spreads Worldwide
Fukushima Radiation Release Worse than You Have Been Told, Large Doses of Vitamin C Important


Umbrella

Two feared dead in English landslide as worsening weather causes chaos

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© Jon Rowley/SWNS.comBeaminster tunnel: Dorset police said one body had been found in a car covered by a landslide and a second was thought to be concealed in the mud.
A man and woman are feared to have died in a mud-filled car found more than a week after it was buried under a landslide caused by torrential rain.

The car was discovered on Monday evening under hundreds of tonnes of mud, earth, bricks and vegetation at the entrance to the Beaminster tunnel in Dorset, which has been closed since a landslide on 7 July.

Avon and Somerset police had been searching for a man and woman who had been missing since the time of the landslide. However, nobody had any idea their car had been caught in the mud.

Dorset police, firefighters and engineers only began searching the landslip after detectives managed to work out from phone and credit card records that the couple had been in the Beaminster area.

Sun

Blistering high temperatures in Greece force early closing of Acropolis

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© Unknown
Greece's hottest day this year is forcing authorities to shut down the Athens Acropolis six hours before schedule in the interests of visitor health, the site's guards said on Monday.

The country's top monument was to shut down at 1100 GMT instead of its normal 1700 GMT closing time, a guard told AFP.

The ancient citadel is perched on a rocky plateau rising amid a sea of concrete in the Greek capital of over four million, offering precious little shade to thousands of tourists who visit it daily.

Temperatures in Athens were set to exceed 42 degrees Celsius (107.6 Fahrenheit) at the close of this year's hottest week that earlier forced authorities to make air-conditioned halls available to the public.

Sun

No relief from drought as sweltering US temperatures return


About 200 million Americans are once again baking as the latest heat wave slammed the Midwest and throughout the Northeast and New England.

Heat advisories were issued Tuesday throughout those areas. Detroit, for example, was forecast to top its all-time record of 101 degrees set in 1887 -- and feel like 110, NBC affiliate ClickOnDetroit.com reported.

New York City could reach 95 degrees but feel like 105 on Tuesday.

"The jet stream has been way up to the north in the midsection of the country," TODAY meteorologist Al Roker said Tuesday. It's being kept there by what's called an upper-level ridge, and that's keeping that section of the U.S. very warm, he added.

The jet stream will drop a bit farther south next week but overall the ridge trapping heat will continue into next week, dire news for drought-hit farmers and ranchers. "There's no relief in sight for at least the next week from drought," Roker said.