Earth Changes
The 5.5-magnitude earthquake at 9:40 a.m. local time (0440 GMT) was centered about 17.5 kilometers (10.8 miles) south of Zaqatala, the capital of Zaqatala Rayon along the Tala River. It struck about 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) deep, making it a shallow earthquake, according to the Republican Seismic Survey Center of the Azerbaijan National Academy of Sciences.
The United States Geological Survey (USGS), which measured the strength of the earthquake at 5.6 on the body wave magnitude (Mb) scale, estimated some 450,000 people near the epicenter may have felt moderate to strong shaking. Another 6.6 million people may have felt weak to light shaking.

Residents move their belongings to higher ground after flooding in the Nahr-i Shahi district of Balkh province on February 21, 2012. Some 40 houses were damaged in overnight flooding in Nahr-i Shahi district of Balkh province.
Most of the victims were women and children as the floods, caused by heavy rains, swept through areas of Deh Mardan district in Sari Pul province, said Fazlullah Sadat, head of the provincial disaster management authority.
"We have found 26 bodies mostly women and children -- and more than 100 others are still missing," he told AFP.
Wedding parties are traditionally large and joyous occasions in rural Afghanistan, but 21 people from one gathering were among the victims, he said.
"This is a human tragedy. We have a lot of human losses," said Sadat.
British scientists have calculated the methane output of sauropods, including the species known as Brontosaurus.
By scaling up the digestive wind of cows, they estimate that the population of dinosaurs - as a whole - produced 520 million tonnes of gas annually.
They suggest the gas could have been a key factor in the warm climate 150 million years ago.
David Wilkinson from Liverpool John Moore's University, and colleagues from the University of London and the University of Glasgow published their results in the journal Current Biology.
Lou and Denise Lambros and their four children were immediately evacuated from their Florida home after the huge hole, that measures 100 feet across and nearly 50 feet deep, suddenly appeared overnight.
A few days after the 'unreal' incident, Lou Lambros says it has sunk in that his family narrowly escaped potential tragedy and spoke of his relief that none of the neighbourhood children, who often came to play in the garden, were hurt.

That sinking feeling: A massive sinkhole 100-ft across appeared in the backyard of the Lambros family's house overnight.

Unbelievable: It took Denise Lambros a few moments to comprehend what she was witnessing when she first saw the sinkhole.
The cause of the sinkhole is unknown, but officials believe the dry weather conditions experienced in parts of the south could have contributed to the hole.

A storm taken from the A34 heading south at Kidlington, Oxfordshire.
The storm, thought to be an unusual "supercell" storm, travelled through the south Midlands, bringing rain, large hailstones, and a tornado in Oxfordshire.
The thunderstorm started in the afternoon in Wiltshire, and moved across Oxfordshire - where a tornado was reported in several places including Bicester, Eynsham, and Kidlington - then moved to Buckinghamshire.
Richard Glazer drove through the tornado with his wife and son on the A34 near Kidlington, Oxfordshire.
"It was very wet, we were just driving on the A34 and looked up and realised one part of the sky was moving in one direction and another in the opposite direction," he said. "I thought, 'that looks like a tornado!' We pretty much drove through it, we were right underneath it. As we drove into it the trees were blowing left to right and as we got through it they were blowing the other way."
On Monday morning, Ramat HaSharon residents complained of a second smelly situation - entirely unrelated to the Thursday incident. This stench was due to a gas pipe replacement on Sokolov Street, and quickly dissipated, the ministry reported.
"I heard a shaking noise - it sounded like wind hitting something," resident Denzell Hutchinson told ABC News affiliate KVUE. "I just thought it was wind blowing hard outside - until I went outside and there was no wind."
The vibrations started early Sunday morning. That's when fire crews arrived in the Harris Branch neighborhood of Austin and noticed homes vibrating. They eventually traced the mysterious vibrations back to the nearby Sunset Farms Landfill.

An artist's rendering shows a giant sauropod. These giants of the dinosaurs may have warmed prehistoric earth with their flatulence.
Sauropods - the long-necked, long-tailed dinosaurs that included some of the largest ever land animals - could have produced enough methane to have "an important effect" on climate change, according to a report to be published in Tuesday's edition of Current Biology.
"Indeed, our calculations suggest that these dinosaurs could have produced more methane than all modern sources - both natural and man-made - put together," Dave Wilkinson of Liverpool John Moores University said in a statement.
Sauropods were plant-eaters. As happens in cows, microbes in the dinosaurs' digestive tract that aided digestion also produced methane, which is a greenhouse gas.
Comment: Completely speculative nonsense from the anthropogenic global warming camp desperate to cling on to the dis-proven corrupt scientific view that blames humans for
Ice in the Bering Sea not only covered more area than usual, it also stuck around longer, bucking the downward trend in sea ice cover observed since 1979, when satellite records for the region began.
The Arctic as a whole had below-average sea ice cover during the 2011 to 2012 winter season. At its maximum, reached in mid-March, sea ice covered 5.88 million square miles (15.24 million square kilometers), the ninth lowest in the satellite record.
Yet Alaskan waters were choked with ice.
Sea ice cover in the Bering Sea was well above normal for much of the season, and reached a record-high extent in March 2012. In addition, ice surrounded the Pribilof Islands, tiny volcanic islands in the middle of the Bering Sea, for a record number of days this winter.
Austin, TX- Several KXAN viewers called Sunday morning after vibrations in a North Austin neighborhood woke people.
In a statement to the media, fire officials now say they believe the source of the strange rumblings can be traced to the Sunset Farms landfill.
"The source of the "vibrations" in Southeast Austin was found to be from the Sunset Farms Landfill at 9912 Giles Rd."










Comment: The PTB are desperate to push an agenda by showing that climate change results from animal and human emissions, rather than solar activity. For more information read: Climate Change Swindlers and the Political Agenda