Earth Changes
The tragedy took place in Naseerpur area of Raunahi police circle on Thursday evening when Riya Varma (7) went out to play with her brother, Raunak, and other kids from the neighbourhood. They were walking towards the canal in the village when dogs attacked them.
The clip, posted to Facebook by Melinda Taylor Findell, shows the ominous gray mass moving quickly across a lake, propelled by the wind.
"That's big enough that would tear something up," someone can be heard saying in the video.
The town of Emerald Isle confirmed on its website that a water spout, or a tornado that forms of water, touched down in the area shortly after 9 a.m. Thursday. Boardwalk RV park suffered the most severe damage, and no injuries were reported, the town confirmed.
As showers and thunderstorms move across the southwest, the crew aboard a Western Finland Coast Guard surveillance aircraft spotted a high-speed waterspout touching down in the Finnish Archipelago on Friday morning.
The team managed to film the meteorological spectacle, which took place near the island municipality of Pargas.

Almost 5,000 dolphins, porpoises and whales have been found washed up dead on shores around the United Kingdom in a single seven-year period. Pictured, a mass stranding of long-finned pilot whales on a b
The number of whales, dolphins and harbour porpoises washed up on UK shores has risen to just under 5,000 in the last decade, a study has found.
A total of 4,896 were were reported to have washed up on beaches between January 1 2011 and December 31 2017, the Government said.
It marks an increase in strandings of 15 per cent on the previous seven-year period, according to the research.
Of the 4,896 incidents, 4,311 were dead strandings, 186 were dead at sea including 21 entangled at sea, and 399 live strandings, only 132 of which were returned alive to the sea.

An international relief operation is picking up momentum after Hurricane Dorian flattened communities in the Bahamas
Prime Minister Hubert Minnis said the death toll was expected to rise as storm rescue workers scour islands.
The Bahamian government sent hundreds of police and marines into the stricken islands, along with doctors, nurses and other health care workers. The U.S. Coast Guard, Britain's Royal Navy and relief organizations, including the United Nations and the Red Cross, joined the growing effort to rush food and medicine to survivors and lift the most desperate people to safety by helicopter.
"We are seeing bravery and fortitude of Bahamians who endured hours and days of horror," Minnis said. "Our urgent task will be to provide food, water, shelter and safety and security."
Comment:
Update: On 7th Sept. Sky News reports:
The hurricane is now making its way up to eastern Canada after hitting the Bahamas.
Forty-three people have been killed in the Bahamas after Hurricane Dorian swept through, as the storm moves up toward eastern Canada.
Hundreds of people are still missing in the Bahamas, where search and rescue teams have yet to reach some communities.
Sky correspondent Amanda Walker is one of the first journalists to make it to High Rock, in the Bahamas.
The aftermath of Hurricane Dorian is still a great unknown. Officials and aid are only just starting to reach some of the worst affected areas nearly a week after the category 5 storm hit .
We managed to reach High Rock - one of the worst hit towns on eastern Grand Bahama and hometown of Dan Kemp who's returning for the first time since the storm.
Downed power lines snake across the road - which is only just passable. During Hurricane Dorian it was an ocean.
He said: "I've been through hurricanes but not like this. I've never seen anything like this.
"It's total devastation."
Dan knows practically everyone we pass or meet along the way. He stops to check his friends are okay, offering them much needed water. He can barely believe his eyes when he sees his brother in law's home.
"Wow - it's just gone," he says.
It is a staggering sight. We reach what was the town's administrative centre. The police station has been smashed wide open. The medical centre across the street - bulldozed. Not by machines - but by nature at its most powerful. 500 people lived in High Rock. Locals told us 40 stayed during Dorian - 17 of them are now missing. The hurricane left only 4 days ago - parking here at peak force for 48 hours.
People look stunned. Kenneth Rolle sits listless outside his shattered home. He shows us inside - the roof has gone - his sofa is stuck in the rafters. He appears to be in total shock as he shows us his brothers wheelchair. 'He's missing. He's dead'. The terror people must have felt in their final moments is unimaginable. Pastor Cecil Kemp saved his neighbor who was up in a tree - clinging for dear life as the water rose. 'I cannot let someone die like that.'
People are picking through debris to patch up homes - raking rubble off foundations with no roofs. There's a need to do something but what they're desperate for is heavy machinery to take away their ruins. This town can only really start again.
We meet Dan Kemp's daughter - returning to what was her grandparents home. There's nothing left - no doors, windows, roof - only the foundations she's walking around in disbelief. Her family is safe but some salvaged ornaments and photos are now they have all they have. 'We have nothing now - no clothes - no home. Nothing.'
Residents say a huge wave came from the north and destroyed everything in its path. It was so powerful that cars were swept into piles of debris along with toilets, TVs cosmetics, watches - the contents of an entire town spewed out by the surge that swallowed their community.
Fearful looking dogs limp around the ruins - how they survived is baffling. People are dazed by trauma - in desperate need of food and shelter. Pick up trucks deliver much needed bottles of water. In this tight community they're doing what they can for each other but its nowhere near enough.
Dan will return with as many supplies as he can. He says his obliterated town can recover but it will take years.
"It is with incredibly heavy hearts that we share the devastating news," wildlife park staff wrote on their Facebook page. "This tragedy has left the entire BC Wildlife Park team in shock and disbelief."
Gustav was found wandering alone on May 21, 2018, by the owners of the Wing Creek Resort in the west Kootenay town of Kaslo.
The orphaned mountain goat was eventually transferred by the BC Conservation Service to the BC Wildlife Park's rehabilitation centre.
What has the report found?
It counted 65.55 lakh* lightning strikes in India during this four-month period, of which 23.53 lakh (36 per cent) happened to be cloud-to-ground lightning, the kind that reaches the Earth. The other 41.04 lakh (64 per cent) were in-cloud lightning, which remains confined to the clouds in which it was formed.
The Amazon rainforest is ablaze. Wildfires have increased by 83 percent this year on last, with nearly 80,000 individual fires spotted by Brazil's National Institute for Space Research. Fires in this region are typically started by farmers every year to clear overgrown land for grazing and replanting, but the extent of this year's inferno has captured the attention of the global media like never before.
"Our home is burning," tweeted French President Emmanuel Macron, promising to make the "emergency" top of the agenda at last month's G7 summit. Macron was joined by US lawmakers, presidential candidates, climate activists, and much of the world's news outlets, who blamed the pro-industrial policies of Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro for accelerating the forest's demise.
Comment: One need only watch SOTT's monthly Earth Changes weather roundup to understand the alarming and extreme weather that hits all corners of the planet. But politicians and activists are choosing to focus on media-created "catastrophes" like the Amazon fires in order to further their agenda of government intervention into the everyday lives of people. It's the wrong way to deal with climate change.














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