A man died Wednesday in Kumamoto Prefecture after falling into a swollen river as heavy rain continued in western Japan.
Kris Crocker
kxly.comThu, 12 Jul 2007 17:26 UTC
They are suffering in Seattle, and throughout western Washington, with record heat. A heatwave of historic proportions peaked today. The high in Seattle: 98 degrees. That broke the old record of 95, set back in 1951, but fell short of the all-time Seattle record of 100 degrees.
THE GEYSERS - A magnitude 3.0 earthuqake was recorded Wednesday morning in The Geysers area, a remote section of Lake County, the U.S. Geological Survey reported.
The minor quake generated no reports of any injuries or damage, authorities said.
The quake's epicenter was one mile west-northwest of The Geysers, a seismically active area along the Sonoma-Lake county border, according to the USGS.
A 3.3 magnitude earthquake shook the southwest Portland metro area at 8:53 p.m. Wednesday.
The quake was centered just west of Barlow, nine miles south of Tualatin and about 19 miles southwest of Portland. Some buildings shook but no one was injured.
AFPThu, 12 Jul 2007 14:25 UTC
A 6.0 magnitude earthquake struck Peru on Thursday near the city of Pucallpa in the Amazonian rain forest, US seismologists said.
The US Geological Survey said the quake occurred at 12.43am (05H23 GMT) and had a depth of 152 kilometres.
Heather Moyer
DNNWed, 11 Jul 2007 10:06 UTC
A flood-weary region cringed again early this week as more rain fell, causing more high water.
Storms drenched parts of Oklahoma and Texas, dropping 3 to 6 inches of rain. Thunderstorms were forecast for the region for the rest of the week.
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©National Weather Service - Wichita, Kansas
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Residents cleaning up from flooding in Coffeyville must cope with an oil spill as well.
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©Reuters
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Local residents check a bridge which is partially submerged by the floods in southwest China's Chongqing municipality
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China flooded dozens of evacuated villages on Tuesday to ease pressure from a swollen river after torrential rains that have killed more than 100 people nationwide.
XinhuaTue, 10 Jul 2007 17:23 UTC
Heavy rain and unseasonably low temperatures have marred the beginning of the summer holiday period in many parts of Switzerland, the official Swiss info website reported on Tuesday.
While the mixed weather appears to have had no major impact on tourism, the authorities issued warnings as the levels of several lakes reached a critical point, according to the report.
AFPTue, 10 Jul 2007 16:01 UTC
A more than 20-kilo (41-lb) mushroom has been picked in a forest in Mexico's southernmost state of Chiapas, university officials said Tuesday.
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©AFP
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Unusual concentrations of the mauve stinger jellyfish, Pelagia noctiluca, have been discovered off Spain's Balearic Islands, as well as elsewhere in the Mediterranean. It is feared the creatures, which can give a painful sting, will show up on tourist beaches in August.
Pelagia noctiluca grows up to 10 centimeters wide, and is sometimes also called the nightlight jellyfish because it produces a blue-green luminescent mucus, most often seen as a glow in ships' wakes. But its more common name, mauve stinger, reflects the species' most noticeable effect on people.
Mauve stingers normally live in the open ocean, so they are often seen around offshore islands such as the Balearics. But they approach mainland beaches in late summer when rainfall drops, and freshwater runoff into coastal seas diminishes, making inshore waters more salty and suited to jellyfish.