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Wed, 27 Oct 2021
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Snowflake

Heavy snowfall hits Switzerland - up to 28 inches overnight

Cows look for grass in the snow in the Vallee de Joux in the Jura on Sunday morning
© JEAN-CHRISTOPHE BOTT
Cows look for grass in the snow in the Vallee de Joux in the Jura on Sunday morning
The end of summer time on the clocks was mirrored by the weather in Switzerland on Sunday as many places woke up to snow - with over 70 centimetres in the resort of Arosa.

The eastern Alps were affected in particular, where it snowed to quite low altitudes, the Swiss weather service MeteoSwiss told Keystone-SDA.

Parts of the eastern canton of Graubünden saw 30-70-centimetres of snow at over 1,200 metres above sea level.


Snowflake

October snow hitting Ireland as temperatures plummet

Snow in Donegal
© @pripfeiffer /Twitter
Snow in Donegal
Snow has officially arrived in Ireland following a night of freezing temperatures.

A light dusting of the fluffy "white stuff" can be seen Lugnaquilla, County Wicklow, ahead of further cold weather into next weekend.

Currently, we are braced for forecasts as cold as Iceland with the mercury predicted to drop to as low as -5 degrees celcius.

Snowflake

Overnight snow of 50 cm (19 inches) wipes out men's giant slalom opener in Austria

Austrian soldiers take down the finish line banner
© Joe Klamar
Austrian soldiers take down the finish line banner as the men's giant slalom competition was cancelled Sunday due to heavy snowfall and strong winds in Sö​lden. Organizers are expected to announce the new date and venue on Monday.
New date, venue for World Cup event to be announced Monday

The season-opening men's World Cup giant slalom that was cancelled due to bad weather at the Rettenbach glacier on Sunday will be rescheduled for another resort in Europe.

The men's race director of governing body FIS, Markus Waldner, said the race will be held before the Christmas break, and that organizers were expected to announce the new date and venue on Monday.

Excessive snowfall and strong winds forced the cancellation of Sunday's race in Sö​lden, Austria.

Organizers initially delayed the start of the giant slalom by an hour, but called off the event soon after as no improvement of the weather was forecast.

Tornado1

Tornadoes in the US are shifting East puzzling scientists

The US tornado Alley shifts to the East.
© Nature
The US tornado Alley shifts to the East.
Over the past few decades tornadoes have been shifting - decreasing in Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas but spinning up more in states along the Mississippi River and farther east. But scientists aren't quite certain why.

Tornado activity is increasing most in Mississippi, Arkansas, Tennessee, Louisiana, Alabama, Kentucky, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin, Iowa and parts of Ohio and Michigan. There has been a slight decrease in the Great Plains, with the biggest drop in central and eastern Texas. Even with the decline, Texas still gets the most tornadoes of any state.

The shift could be deadly because the area with increasing tornado activity is bigger and home to more people. Also more people live in vulnerable mobile homes and tornadoes are more likely to happen at night in those places.

Comment: The model of cyclonic activity based solely on heat and moisture is outdated, and the likely explanation relates to our quieting sun, increased meteor dust, and the changing behaviour of electro-magnetism on our planet.

In the book Earth Changes and the Human-Cosmic Connection Pierre Lescaudron and Laura Knight-Jadcyzk explain this in greater detail:
The accumulation of cometary dust in the Earth's atmosphere plays an important role in the increase of tornadoes, cyclones, hurricanes and their associated rainfalls, snowfalls and lightning. To understand this mechanism we must first take into account the electric nature of hurricanes, tornadoes and cyclones, which are actually manifestations of the same electric phenomenon at different scales or levels of power. Because of this similarity, we will refer to these three phenomena collectively as 'air spirals' in the following discussion.

McCanney describes the electric nature of hurricanes in these terms:
A simple model showed that these [tropical] storms formed when electrical currents connected between the ionosphere and the top of the clouds. [...] the reason hurricanes lost power when they approached land was that the powering electrical current from the ionosphere to the cloud tops and to the Earth's surface had no connection (anode) while over the ocean [...] so it drew up vast surface areas of ionized air from the ocean surface and sucked them up a central column (the spinning vortex was caused by the moist air rising 'up the drain') [...] whereas the land provided a 'ground' for the current and therefore it shunted out the storm's power source. [...] I also calculated that the warm water theory for hurricane development lacked sufficient energy to account for the energy in these massive storms. We later witnessed hurricanes on Mars where there is no water at all. Clearly, the warm water concept did not work [...]1
waterspout tornado
© Fred K. Smith, National Geographic.
A waterspout parallels a lightning strike over Lake Okeechobee in Florida.
From this perspective, air spirals are simply the manifestation of electric discharges between the ionosphere and the Earth's surface. The image above shows a waterspout and a lightning bolt occurring in the same place at the same time, suggesting that indeed electric potential difference between the clouds at the top of the picture and the ground at the bottom is what powers both the lightning and the tornado.
And check out the companion podcast: Behind the Headlines: Earth changes in an electric universe: Is climate change really man-made?

See also:


Seismograph

Strong M5.8 earthquake rocks Romania - Also felt in Ukraine, Moldova and Bulgaria

Bucharest, Romania.
© Alamy
Bucharest, Romania.
An earthquake with a magnitude of 5.8 has rattled central and eastern Romania and was also felt in Ukraine, Moldova and Bulgaria, but there has been no reports of significant damage.

The tremor, which lasted for several seconds, occurred at 3:38 am Sunday, local time, in the eastern quake-prone region of Vrancea at a depth of 150 kilometres, Romania's National Earth Physics Institute said.

The quake woke residents in the capital, Bucharest, and elsewhere. Bucharest Ambulance Service spokeswoman Alice Grasu said a dozen or so residents telephoned immediately after the quake suffering from panic attacks.

Comment: USGS reports there has been elevated activity in the area following an unusually strong M6.8 quake in Greece just a few days ago, and in the last 24 hours there's been at least 8 notable events; an M4.7 quake in Greece, with multiple aftershocks, and another in Georgia at M4.1. Elsewhere on the planet, seismic and volcanic activity has also been rather high:


Fire

18 volcanoes in the US pose a "very high" threat according to updated USGS

Hawaii volcano eruption- lava flow into pacific
© AP
Lava from the Kilaeua volcano can be seen flowing into the Pacific Ocean near Kapoho Bay and Vactionland on the Big Island. Scientists said that the lava flow's impact on the local marine life could be felt for decades, if not a century
Hawaii's Kilauea volcano tops the list of 161 active or potentially active volcanoes assessed by the USGS.

The government agency looked at 24 hazard and exposure factors to assesses the volcanoes and update a volcanic threat assessment published by scientist John Ewert and colleagues 13 years ago.

The US has seen 120 eruptions and 52 episodes of notable volcanic unrest at 44 US volcanoes since 1980, the USGS said.

And of the 161 volcanoes, the assessment classed 18 as very high threat, 39 high threat, 49 moderate threat, 34 low threat, and 21 very low threat volcanoes.

Comment: As we enter solar minimum, Earth's rotation has slowed and a continuous increase in cosmic radiation has been recorded, in turn, there's been a rise in volcanic and seismic activity (amongst many other phenomena). And since we have yet to reach the lowest point of the solar cycle, we can only expect these events to become more frequent and extreme.

See also: One US volcano, curiously missing from the list, considering the notable increase in activity in the past year, is Yellowstone: Also check out SOTTs monthly documentary: SOTT Earth Changes Summary - September 2018: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs




Attention

Volcanic eruption detected at Semisopochnoi Island, Alaska

map volcano
Strong seismic activity consistent with a volcanic eruption was measured by the U.S. Geological Survey on Semisopochnoi Island beginning at 8:47 p.m. Thursday night, with a small ash cloud observed by satellite at an altitude of 12,000 feet at 9:00 p.m. Thursday.

USGS has raised the Aviation Color Code and Alert Level to Orange for Semisopochnoi or Unyak Island, located in the western Aleutian Islands at an elevation of 2,625 feet.

Southeast winds were reported in the area.

The seismic activity is reportedly diminishing.

Info

Ice Age Farmer Report: Plastics are in your food - Must grow your own food!

BPA, gender-bending chemicals teens

A study by the University of Exeter, whose researchers tested urine samples from 94 teenagers, found 86 per cent had traces of BPA in their body.
Plastics found in 100% of people sampled--why? @ 9:15. Virginia's wettest May ever has led to an acorn shortage, and now hungry bears are roaming the streets @ 5:13. Australia's grain production hits an 11-year low. It's imperative we start growing our own food today.


Sources

Cloud Precipitation

Nine provinces of Iran inundated by floods

Flash flood has hit nine provinces of the country since Thursday, said head of Rescue and Relief Organization, Morteza Salimi.

Flash flood has hit nine provinces of the country since Thursday, said head of Rescue and Relief Organization, Morteza Salimi.
Over the past 48 hours, continuous, torrential rains have led to floods in nine provinces of the country, including East and West Azarbaijan, Ardebil, Ilam, Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari, North Khorasan, Khuzestan, Kermanshah and Lorestan.

Salimi went on to explain that the Red Crescent Society sent a fully equipped medical contingent to flood-ravaged areas to help with relief efforts, so that more than 476 individuals were rescued by 49 Red Crescent teams who conducted operation in 15 rural areas during this period.

Providing emergency shelter for individuals and transferring 8 people to safe zones and 4 people to hospitals are among other operations of Red Crescent rescue and relief teams, he concluded.

Attention

Rare Sowerby's beaked whale washes up on beach in Brighton, UK

dead whale
A rare whale washed up on a beach last night (Friday) in what has been described as a once-in-a-century event.

The 4.2m long Sowerby's beaked whale is thought to have become stranded at Saltdean shortly before 8pm.

Newhaven Coastguard was called to the scene where they found the dead whale.

They said in a statement: "The team were tasked to investigate a stranded whale on the beach at Saltdean.

"When the team arrived the 4.2 metre long Sowerby' beaked whale was deceased.

"The whale was pulled approximately 120 metres to the promenade using salvage equipment supplied by Cutts Marine."