Earth Changes
Raschel Zeschuk lives in Paradise Hill, northeast of Lloydminster, and goes on daily walks with her two dogs.
But on April 21 the walk was anything but routine.
Zeschuk had just reached the end point of her usual route and turned around to return home when she heard rustling behind her.
"I glanced back and about five to 10 feet behind me was my dog running towards me," she said. Behind her dog was a black bear in hot pursuit.

Horrible discovery: The fish were discovered yesterday floating in Hongcheng Lake in Haikou, southern China's Hainan province
Horrifying images show the animals covering a large part of Hongcheng Lake in Haikou, southern China's Hainan province.
Sanitation workers have been recovering the dead fish and have so far collected 30 tonnes, the People's Daily Online reports.
According to Haikou City Board of Marine and Fisheries, the large number of dead fish is due to a change in salinity.
Its suspected that the fish have floated in from another place.
40 sanitation workers have attended the scene to recover the deceased animals.

Officials with the International Fund for Animal Welfare and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service examine a right whale calf that was found floating off Chatham Thursday.
Chatham Harbormaster Stuart Smith said he was notified of the whale Thursday morning. Deputy Harbormaster Jason Holm and Wharfinger Mike Ryder located it drifting in the channel off Morris Island and pushed it ashore near the Stage Harbor Light. They reported the whale appeared to have been hit by a vessel and there was no sign of entanglement in line or gear, Smith said.
The whale, which had died recently, is between 27 and 28 feet long and had been identified earlier this year by the New England Aquarium, said Misty Niemeyer, necropsy coordinator for the Yarmouth Port-based International Fund for Animal Welfare, which responded to examine the whale in Thursday's spitting rain.
The calf was last spotted in Cape Cod Bay on April 28 with its mother "Punctuation." Most right whales left the bay as the spring plankton bloom waned. The calf found Thursday was first seen January 12 off Georgia with its mother, according to National Marine Fisheries Service spokeswoman Jennifer Goebel. Punctuation is a successful mother who has given birth to eight calves, Goebel said. Two, including the one found Thursday, have died in their first year.

Volunteers and researchers from the New England Aquarium perform a necropsy to determine the cause of death of a minke whale that washed up on a Biddeford beach off Granite Street.
Lynda Doughty, executive director of Marine Mammals of Maine, a nonprofit group that rescues ocean mammals, said the cause of the adult female whale's death was not immediately obvious. Her group, with help from staff members of the New England Aquarium in Boston, were conducting a full necropsy of the animal and collecting samples to find out how it died.
"It is still to be determined. We got the report of the animal on Tuesday. It probably died out at sea and came in with the tide," she said.
A resident of Granite Point Road reported the dead 28-foot whale on a Horseshoe Cove beach, Doughty said. The air was pungent around the whale carcass, and volunteers wore masks, along with gloves and oilskins, as they cut away portions of the animal.
The deceased were identified as Jinaram Gondaliya and Shivraj Khuman. They were working in their fields when they were hit by lightning.
On Thursday evening, the weather changed suddenly in Savarkundla, Liliya and Amreli with showers accompanied by hailstones. Heavy winds even uprooted roadside trees on Savarkundla-Palitana highway. The road was blocked for nearly an hour for vehicular movement.
In Jeera village of Savarkundla, blowing winds swept a 'pandal' erected for a Ram Katha. Some villages of Amreli even received more than 30mm rainfall in just one hour.
Similarly, showers with hailstones occurred in Bhuj and nearby areas of Kutch. Bhuj received about 11mm rainfall in one hour. The sudden showers flooded streets and roads in Bhuj and Gandhidham cities. Weather office said that a local disturbance due to difference in day and night temperatures had resulted in the showers.
Meanwhile, the India Meteorological Department (IMD) officials have forecast light to moderate rains and thundershowers in coastal Saurashtra in the next two days.
Source: TNN

A pumping machine in an empty lake in Kandal province, Cambodia. The country is facing its worst drought in decades.
Behind a clutch of huts that hug the major route between Cambodia's capital and its famed Angkor temples, rice farmers Phem Phean and Sok Khoert peer into a cement hollow.
It is several meters deep, and one has to crane over the top to see all the way down. At the bottom, all that is left is a small pool of warm, dirty-looking water; it has run all but dry, along with two other wells, meaning the farmers and four other families have just one working well left from which to drink. And that, too, is fast running out.
Behind them, hundreds of acres of parched earth bake under an unrelenting sun in a relatively cloudless sky. If a rice harvest is even possible this year, they fear it is set to be poor and their main concern right now is being able to get enough water to drink.

A Canadian Joint Operations Command aerial photo shows wildfires near neighborhoods in Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada in this May 4, 2016
On Thursday, the enormous fire that had already destroyed hundreds of homes and encircled a city and several communities was picked up by 70 kilometer-per-hour (44mph) winds and spread to 85,000 hectares.
The most severe part of the roaring front moved south of Fort McMurray, with no signs of stopping.
Over 1,110 firefighters, 145 helicopters, 138 pieces of heavy equipment, and 22 air tankers are fighting a total of 49 wildfires across Alberta, seven of which are currently considered to be out of control, according to the provincial government.
Despite all the firefighting efforts, the blaze around Fort McMurray is expected to grow stronger.
"Let me be clear, air tankers are not going to stop this fire," Chad Morrison, manager of Alberta's wildfire prevention, said at a briefing on Thursday. "This is an extreme fire event. It's going to continue to push through these dry conditions until we actually get some significant rain to help us."

22 degree Halo — a ring of light around the sun on Saturday on Kolkata sky.
A red and blue ring around the sun, popularly known as '22 degree circular halo' was sighted this afternoon in the city.
The phenomenon was observed between 12.10 pm and 12.40 pm when the fifth and penultimate phase of Assembly elections was underway in parts of the city.
The phenomenon popularly known as the 22 degree circular halo of the sun or occasionally the Moon (also called a moon ring or winter halo), occurs when the sun's or moon's rays get deflected/ refracted through the hexagonal ice crystals present in cirrus clouds, a senior researcher with the MP Birla Planetarium told.
"These kind of cirrus clouds are generally formed when water vapour freezes into ice crystals at altitudes five to ten kilometres above the earth's surface," the researcher said.
"It's a very common phenomenon in the cold countries. But in our country it's occurrence is rare and cannot be predicted... The red and blue ring around the sun was seen for around 30 minutes," he added.
Last year, scientists were shocked when more than 300 whales turned up dead on remote bays of the southern coast — it was the first in a series of grim finds.
A surge in algae in the water earlier this year choked to death an estimated 40,000 tonnes of salmon in the Los Lagos region — equal to about 12 per cent of Chile's annual production of the fish.
This month, about 8,000 tonnes of sardines were washed up at the mouth of the Queule river and thousands of dead clams piled up on the coast of Chiloe Island.

Researchers believe the quakes could be caused by pieces of the Earth's mantle breaking off and sinking into the planet in the affected area (shown here). They say pieces of the mantle have most likely been breaking off from underneath the plate since at least 65 million years ago. This map shows the study area in detail.
Researchers have been baffled, believing the areas should be relatively quiet in terms of seismic activity, as it is located in the interior of the North American Plate, far away from plate boundaries where earthquakes usually occur.
Now, they believe the quakes could be caused by pieces of the Earth's mantle breaking off and sinking into the planet.
A new study found pieces of the mantle under this region have been periodically breaking off and sinking down into the Earth. This thins and weakens the remaining plate, making it more prone to slipping that causes earthquakes.
The study authors conclude this process is ongoing and likely to produce more earthquakes in the future.











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