Earth Changes
Video filmed in the city of Tongliao in Inner Mongolia on September 8 shows a huge twister swirling above the city, rolling debris up into the sky.
A woman was hit by the debris but she was not injured seriously.
Houses, electrical devices and crops were damaged.
210 National Highway and Yushui River water obstructed by the fallen debris. One person suffered fractures to his leg and ribs and another was trapped.
The injured person was sent to the hospital for treatment, while the trapped person was rescued successfully and his vital signs are stable.
After the danger occurred, the local emergency rescue and rescue headquarters was established to carry out emergency rescue and disposal work. At present, 210 National Highway has implemented traffic diversion control, and the village groups around the landslide are being arranged to transfer personnel from upstream and downstream risk areas. Rescue and rescue work is being carried out in an orderly manner.
The 44-year-old emergency worker was killed on Thursday afternoon while battling the 'out-of-control' blaze alongside colleagues, officials confirmed.
Many local residents and holidaymakers staying nearby were told to evacuate their homes and accommodation, with a small number put up in a sports pavilion set up to house around 100 people.
Two waterspouts formed, and people saw them from all over.
Alexander Molina saw the twin spouts and shared the video with CBS12 News.
CBS12 News viewers Shirley Suarez and William Ramos captured photos of the spouts in the Lake Worth Beach area.
Last weekend the bodies of 56 dead guillemots, two razorbills and three gannets littered St Cyrus beach in Aberdeenshire with several more emaciated birds given over to the Scottish SPCA.
Bosses at the St Cyrus nature reserve have been left baffled by the huge numbers of bodies washing up with the tide- as the animals should now be further out to sea given the time of the year.
They added that a probe would be conducted to rule out anything 'more sinister'.
Hundreds of dead birds have been reported up and down the length of the country.
Bloodbath scenes unfolded at a Scots beach where three whales tragically passed away.
Upsetting images shared with the Daily Record show the three mammals, believed to be Sowerby's beaked whales, washed up on Sandhead Bay in Dumfries and Galloway on Tuesday.
Two were in the water while another was further up the beach, in huge pools of their own blood.
Local dog walkers rushed to their aid and called emergency services at around 7.30am.
But it was too late for the marine creatures, that died a short time later.
At present, the flood is subsiding, mbl.is reports. The maximum discharge by Sveinstindur mountain was about 1,500 m3 per second Tuesday morning, according to Einar Hjörleifsson, natural hazards specialist at the Icelandic Met Office. According to the latest updates from the Met Office , posted at 8:30 am, the discharge is presently below 600 m3 per second by Sveinstindur.
Forest officials later found the enormous beast's dead body 28 miles away.
In the clip, the OAP can be seen walking his tiny dog along a road in a village near India's western city of Pune, when a vicious hyena pokes out of the grass to his left.
The predator approaches and pounces on the terrified old man, before moving on to a motorcyclist riding past.
Someone immediately comes to his aid but the creature warns him away by bearing his teeth.
All throughout the night the tropical storm wielded its wrath, dumping non-stop heavy rain all over the country and Pattaya was not spared.
The rain did not stop at dawn but kept pouring down all morning and through most of the day.
Pattaya streets are known to flood even with the slightest of rainfall, but with such a forceful blitz of rain throughout the night, the worst was about to hit the unsuspecting citizens that day.
By late morning, the extent of the devastation became more visible as water rose to new heights in almost every part of town.
Comment: For details of the earlier event on 27th August, see: Flooding in Pattaya, Thailand over 1 metre deep strands cars, floods homes















Comment: Related: Beijing's flood season precipitation hits 20-year high - 70% above average in 2021