Earth Changes
New data shows the kangaroo population in Australia is close to hitting 50 million, while the human population stands at 24 million.
Experts are now warning Australians to hunt, eat and cull the native animal or face being overrun by it.
The kangaroo population has boomed in recent years, rising to 45 million last year from 27 million in 2010, news.com.au reported. The huge rise in kangaroo numbers is thought to be due to an abundance of food after high rainfall.
David Paton, Associate Professor from the University of Adelaide, said communities needed to support kangaroo culling programmes and eat their meat to avoid wasting carcasses.

A large dead whale, thought to be a blue whale, has been spotted adrift south-west of D'Urville Island.
Sealord skipper Peter Connolly said he was out fishing when he spotted it off the western side of d'Urville Island north of Nelson.
"It was so bloated it just looked like the hull of a boat upside down... when we got close I realised what it was," Connolly said.
He said at first he thought sharks were feeding on it.
"But it wasn't. It was those big black petrels ... they're like an albatross size bird. They were just feeding on it absolutely profusely."
Connolly said he couldn't see any obvious injuries to suggest the whale had been hit by anything.
While two persons were killed in Seoni this afternoon, one person each died in Hoshangabad and Sehore districts yesterday.
In Seoni, two farmers died when they were struck by the bolt from sky this afternoon in Turiya village, located in the buffer zone of Pench Tiger Reserve, Kurai police station sub-inspector SB Sharma said.
"The incident occurred when the two farmers were standing under a tree amid heavy rains when they were hit by lightning, killing both of them. The duo are identified as Insaram Bhondve (45) and Nandkishore Bhondve (35)," Sharma said.

People are seen cleaning mud following floods in Livorno, Italy, September 10, 2017
The Mayor of the Tuscan city, Fillipo Nogarin, tweeted that around 290 homes were still without power Monday, down from 2700 the day before.
She has been identified as 33-year-old Marsha Whyte of Works Yard in the community.
It's reported that Whyte was at home yesterday when she went to catch water from an outside pipe during the rain and was struck during a lightning storm.
Whyte was taken to the Princess Margaret Hospital where she was pronounced dead.
A post mortem is to be conducted to determine the cause of death.

A volatile storm brewing over Southern California produced nearly 40,000 lightning strikes and threatened to bring more rain Monday, forecasters said
The lightning and in-cloud flashes were observed in the last 24 hours over Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo and Ventura counties, with the most activity occurring Sunday evening, according to the National Weather Service. In one instance, forecasters recorded more than 5,000 lightning bolts in the area over a three-hour period.
"That's a lot," said meteorologist Kathy Hoxsie of the weather service in Oxnard.
Although the storm brought plenty of lightning, rain totals were less than half an inch in Santa Barbara County on Sunday. The greatest rain total was observed at Sudden Peak, which received .44 inches.
The Kilauea volcano has erupted from its Pu'u O'o vent since 1983.
Late this week, Kilauea, the world's most active volcano sent streams of lava rolling down a 30-foot cone.
The outbreak came from a break at the top of a huge tumulus just above the cliffs about four miles below the active Pu'u 'O'o vent.
The eruption, dubbed 61G by the USGS began in early 2016 and has been entering the ocean nearby since summer of that year.
Source: Reuters
After a spell of intense heat in the Bay Area, a huge storm finally broke over San Francisco on Monday, unleashing more than 800 lightning strikes in mere hours, according to the National Weather Service.
Starting around midday, the lightning blitz continued after night fell, treating locals to a spectacular light show.
The incessant storm forced the baseball game between the San Francisco Giants and their California rivals, the Los Angeles Dodgers, to be delayed, as bolts of lightning rained down around the stadium.
According to local news station KRON 4 a worker at San Francisco Airport was struck during the barrage of lightning strikes.
The worker was operating an aircraft towing vehicle when he was struck. Luckily he did not sustain serious injuries and wasn't even taken to hospital.

A cloud formation known as a "fallstreak hole" developed over the Central Coast last week, prompting many phone calls and emails to meteorologist John Lindsey, who captured this image of the phenomenon.
I received numerous emails, photos and phone calls about it.
From earliest times; people have tried to understand the weather. Great thinkers from Aristotle to French philosopher René Descartes tried to explain atmospheric phenomena through the formation and lifespan of clouds.
Comment: In recent times this rare cloud phenomena has appeared over Southern California, UK, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.
Other strange cloud anomalies seem to be appearing globally with higher frequency and intensity. Factors which may contribute to these 'strange skies' are atmospheric dust loading from increased comet and volcanic activity and changes in the layers of the atmosphere.
An indicator of this dust loading is the intensification of noctilucent clouds we are observing. As explained in Pierre Lescaudron's book, Earth Changes and the Human-Cosmic Connection:
The increase in noctilucent clouds is one of the effects - among others - of increased dust concentration in the atmosphere in general, and in the upper atmosphere in particular. We suspect that most of this atmospheric dust is of cometary origin, while some of it may be due to the recent increase in volcanic activity.See also: Chemtrails? Contrails? Strange skies

Hazardous widespread tsunami waves are possible in Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Panama, Honduras, and Ecuador following the quake, said USGS.
People in Mexico City ran out into the streets after the quake struck, a Reuters witness said.
Its epicentre was 123km south-west of the town of Pijijiapan, at a depth of 33km.
Widespread, hazardous tsunami waves are possible in Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Panama, Honduras, and Ecuador, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre said.
Comment: The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center (PTWC) issued an updated situation report, saying that "Tsunami waves reaching more than 3 meters above the tide level are possible along some coasts of Mexico," and waves reaching up to one meter are expected to hit the coastlines of adjacent countries.
UPDATES: 09.35 (CET)
Officials said that it was the strongest quake to hit the capital since the 1985 tremor that killed thousands and flattened swathes of Mexico City. Five people have been killed including two children in Tabasco state. A deep 6.1 magnitude earthquake hit off Japan's Bonin Islands yesterday at a depth of 450 kilometres (280 miles).
An eyewitness uploaded dazzling footage of earthquake lights that appeared in the skies over Mexico City shortly after the quake.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center says waves of 1 metre (3.3 feet) above the tide level were measured off Salina Cruz. Smaller tsunami waves were observed on the coast or measured by ocean gauges in several other places.
The center's forecast said Ecuador, El Salvador and Guatemala could see waves of a metre or less. No threat was posed to Hawaii and the western and South Pacific.
16.00 (CET)
The death toll from the 8.2 magnitude (registered by local calculations) earthquake that hit Mexico has reached at least 32, according to tallies from local authorities. "It was a major earthquake in scale and magnitude, the strongest in the past 100 years," President Peña Nieto said. The US Geological Survey reported the quake's magnitude at 8.1.
Peña Nieto said the quake was felt by 50 million of the country's 120 million residents, and was also felt in much of Guatemala, which borders Chiapas. He warned more aftershocks are likely, and has urged people to check their homes and offices for structural damage and gas leaks.
Sept. 9 (09.55 CET)
The death toll from yesterday's Mexico earthquake, the strongest earthquake to hit the country in a century, is at least 61. Jana Pursely, a geophysicist at the US Geological Survey, told CNN that the quake was relatively shallow, which resulted in more "intense shaking".
Scenes of demolished buildings, teetering streetlight posts, and blacked-out subway stations have been circulating on social media. Mexico's Federal Commission of Electricity calculates that 1.85 million residents across the country were affected by power cuts.
The region where the earthquake struck is one of the most active seismic zones in the country: this is where the Cocos Plate dives, or subducts, under the North American plate. "Earthquakes of this size are not uncommon at subduction zone boundaries," notes Jascha Polet, a seismologist at California Polytechnic State University in Pomona.
But this quake was different: it occurred within the Cocos plate, as it warped or bent, not at the boundary with the North American plate, according to the US Geological Survey.
"The type of faulting that occurred here does not usually produce earthquakes of this magnitude," says Polet. "There have been others in the past 50 years of similar type and location, but none that was even close to this size." It is still too early to say why the earthquake was so massive, she adds, but "it is sure to inspire much future research".
Mexico's seismology agency has registered at least 337 aftershocks, with the strongest reaching a magnitude of 6.1.
Meanwhile Hurricane Katia has made landfall in the state of Veracruz on the Mexican Gulf coast, the U.S. National Hurricane Center (NHC) said. It lost some strength before it landed about 115 miles (185 km) northwest of the port city of Veracruz as a Category 1 storm with sustained winds 75 mph (120 km/h). The storm was expected to weaken rapidly over the next day, the NHC said.
Update (Sept. 12)
The death toll from last week's powerful earthquake in Mexico has risen to at least 96. Authorities also say 2.5 million people are in need of food, water and electricity. The 8.1-magnitude quake struck Friday near Mexico's border with Guatemala. It damaged at least 12,000 homes, and that number is expected to rise.
According to Science Magazine last week's unusual temblor may have relieved pressure in one of two "seismic gaps" in the subduction zone off Mexico's coast, where tectonic plates grind past one another. The epicenter of the quake, which struck just before midnight local time, was just southeast of the Tehuantepec gap, a 125-kilometer-long stretch of Mexico's Pacific coast that has been seismically silent since record-keeping began more than a century ago.
All along that coast, the ocean's tectonic plates meet the continental North American plate and are forced underneath it. Violent earthquakes mark the release of built-up pressure between the grinding plates. But the ruptures have somehow avoided the Tehuantepec gap and the Guerrero gap, more than 500 kilometers to the northwest.
For decades, scientists have monitored the Guerrero gap because of its proximity to Mexico City. A rupture there could devastate the capital, which is built on a drained lakebed that amplifies seismic waves. In 1985, a magnitude-8.1 quake near the Guerrero gap killed thousands, spurring the city to install a seismic alert system and tighten building codes. Those measures seemed to help last week: The capital sustained little damage in spite of considerable shaking.
The quake's effect on the gap is hard to judge though, because of its unusual origin. Most big Mexican earthquakes occur right along the interface between the colliding Cocos and North American plates. But this rupture began 70 kilometers down, within the Cocos plate itself, and rose up before stopping at about 40 kilometers' depth, likely at the plate interface.
"It's not the same fault that they're expecting [to close] the Tehuantepec gap," says Joann Stock, a seismologist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.
That leaves the future risk of the Tehuantepec gap unclear. In fact, Stock says, last week's quake might have even added stress at the gap and increased chances for future slipping. But, she adds, the depth of the shaking had at least one benefit: The rupture didn't break through all the way to the ocean floor, which dampened tsunamis. The resulting waves in Chiapas and Oaxaca were only 2 to 3 meters high.
Vladimir Kostoglodov, a seismologist at UNAM in Mexico City, says he is fielding requests for data from researchers around the world who want to investigate this "extremely strange" earthquake and its aftermath. "It's worth making a big effort to learn what's happening," he says. "This might happen in other subduction zones in other parts of the world."











Comment: Other fatalities caused by lightning strikes across southern Asia in the past week include a woman in Cambodia, with 4 deaths across Bangladesh while in India 2 were killed Odisha, 2 in Tamil Nadu and a farmer and his cow in Karnataka.