Earth Changes
Hundreds of dead birds have been filmed around Mount Agung as the intensity and frequency of tremors near the volcano increase.
Nearly 50,000 people have fled their homes, seeking shelter in squalid evacuation centres.
The threat isn't affecting popular tourist areas such as Kuta and Seminyak, which are outside the danger zones.
Mount Agung is about 75 kilometres (47 miles) from the tourist hub of Kuta, and has been rumbling since August, threatening to erupt for the first time in more than 50 years.

Two wolf cubs are picked up on hidden cameras in the nature reserve of Castel di Guido near Rome, which is run by run by LIPU, the Italian League for the Protection of Birds
The predators were seen roaming through the Castel di Guido, near Leonardo da Vinci airport, walking close to a three-lane motorway.
Scientists have welcomed the symbolic return, given that the city's symbol is two children - Romulus and Remus - suckling on a wolf.
Alessia De Lorenzis, a professor of natural sciences who is monitoring the wolf pack, told The Telegraph: 'This is the first time in more than 100 years that wolves have been found living near Rome.
More than 75,000 people have been evacuated in the last few days as Agung, the highest point of the island, has experienced hundreds of internal volcanic earthquakes. "Instrumentally we have never recorded such high energy or seismicity from Mount Agung," Devy Kamil Syahbana, a seismologist from Indonesia's centre for volcanology and geological hazard mitigation, told the Guardian.
Data showed that Mount Agung experienced 844 volcanic earthquakes on Monday, and 300 to 400 earthquakes by midday on Tuesday, he said. "We need to pay attention because these kinds of earthquakes indicate the movement of magma and increase the probability of an eruption."
Evacuated people have sought shelter in hundreds of village halls and sports centres and in the homes of relatives in more than nine districts. President Joko Widodo is scheduled to visit evacuees at several camps on Tuesday. Authorities have urged people to stay out the danger zone, a designated five-to-seven-mile radius of the volcano.
The increasing frequency of deep and shallow volcanic earthquakes, as well as local tectonic tremors, is an indication that magma continues to move toward the surface. The alert status of Agung was raised to the highest levelon Friday evening following a significant spike in seismic activity. Kasbani, the head of the volcanology centre, told local media that if tremors continued, an eruption - the first in more than half a century - could be a "matter of hours" away.
Winter is coming — which means ski season is coming! It's only September but 13 B.C. mountains have already received their first snowfall!!! Whistler here we come. Here's hoping ski season starts early this year.
Check out all the pictures of the B.C. mountains' first dusting of fresh powder.
A weather observer at the Grand Mesa Lodge reported 11 inches over the weekend.
The snow prompted the National Weather Service in Grand Junction to issue Colorado's first winter weather advisory of the season.
Colorado's Grand Mesa is no stranger to early snowfall.
Last year they received almost of foot of snow between Sept. 24-25 and racked up a total of 408.5 inches for the season.

The USGS measured a 6.4 earthquake to the south of Fiji, and the southwest of Tonga, at 98 kilometres deep, 846km south east of Suva, at 1619 Fiji Time on 26 September 2017.
The US Geological Survery measured the quake, which occurred today at 1619 Fiji Time, at a depth of 98 kilometres.
According to disaster response authorities in Fiji, the quake's epicentre was 846km south east of Suva, which is just to the west of the Tongan trench.
The co-ordinates of the quake are 23.713°S 176.937°W.
The injuries on its body and near the tail indicated that it was hit by the propeller of a boat engine. Veterinary surgeons carried out a post-mortem on the carcass, which was highly decomposed, after which it was buried on the shore.
Many were amused to see the carcass and were busy taking photographs before forest officials reached the spot.
The length of the schedule-1 marine creature is around 16 ft and width is 9 ft, Range Officer Asit Mishra said.
"When it was floating in the sea, we suspected that it might be the carcass of a whale. But, when it washed ashore, we confirmed that it belongs to shark species," Mishra added.
The photographs of the marine animal were sent to top wildlife experts.
The reason of casualty is not known. It can only be ascertained after post mortem, he pointed out.
The body will be buried after autopsy.
He was bitten in the arm just before 2 p.m., a Fire Rescue official said.
The man, who was not identified, was treated by lifeguards before being taken to a hospital.
Zachary Johnson, of Boynton Beach, said he was on the Lake Worth Pier when he saw a surfer wash into a school of fish on a wave about 10 feet away from the pier. A shadow appeared next to the surfer, Johnson said, and he saw something quickly bite the man and swim on.
"It clearly did not want him," Johnson recalled, noting that whatever bit the surfer let go immediately.
Johnson said the surfer then paddled back to shore where others met him and wrapped his arm with a shirt.

A total fire ban has been declared for Greater Sydney, the Illawara and most of the state's northeast today.
The blaze, which was raging in the Innes View area, west of Comboyne, blackened about 950 hectares in hot and windy conditions on Sunday afternoon.
Dozens of firefighters and water-bombing aircraft attempted to get the flames under control and warned residents they would see smoke and possibly embers.
"Structures have been destroyed," the NSW RFS said in a statement.
"Building impact assessment teams are on the way to confirm the number and type."












Comment: See also: