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Wed, 27 Oct 2021
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Unstable planet: Is the giant 7.0 earthquake in Anchorage, Alaska a precursor to a devastating convulsion in the west coast?

Anchorage quake
We just got more evidence that our planet is becoming increasingly unstable. On Friday a magnitude 7.0 earthquake destroyed homes, ripped apart roads and destroyed infrastructure all throughout Anchorage, Alaska. According to the USGS, the earthquake hit at 8:29 AM and the epicenter was approximately 7 miles north of Anchorage. That quake was followed by a highly destructive magnitude 5.7 aftershock just a little while later. Alaska Governor Bill Walker has declared a state of emergency, and the entire region is in a state of chaos. Unfortunately, as global seismic activity continues to increase, more quakes like this are inevitable. Like Alaska, the entire west coast of the United States sits directly along the "Ring of Fire", and many have warned that "the Big One" is coming sooner rather than later.


Tonight, large numbers of Anchorage residents are suddenly homeless, and that includes Alaska's most famous politician...
Light fixtures fell, glass shattered, roadways and supermarket aisles were awash from food spilled from broken jars. Video images showed some roadways had collapsed. One man tweeted a photo of his toppled chimney and a local television station showed its studio filled with debris.

Former Alaska governor and vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin tweeted, saying her family is intact but her "house is not."

Comment: See also:


Fish

Scotland's worst ever salmon season blamed on extreme weather

salmon
Global warming is being blamed for Scotland's worst salmon season in living memory.

Some beats on famous rivers like the Spey and the Nith recorded not a single salmon caught during the entire season.

Just two salmon were caught on the River Fyne in Argyll this year, where once more than 700 were caught each season.

The number of fish caught by anglers has been so low that some estates have stopped selling permits for once-popular beats because there is no fish to catch.

Tourism has been hit, sales of salmon tackle have slumped and ghillies have lost their jobs.

Experts believe rising temperatures blamed on global warming have badly hit the salmon's feeding grounds with related changes in current patterns also affecting their migration.


Comment: It's true, Europe suffered a prolonged heatwave and drought this summer, but winter, spring and autumn saw unprecedented cold and flooding. But what's happening to salmon appears to be reflective of the rapid decline seen in a myriad of other species, and that's likely related to the extreme shifts occurring on our planet:


Attention

Canadian potato shortage looms due to 'harvest from hell' after unseasonable weather

potatoes
© Associated Press
Bad weather brings potato shortage: farmers Manitoba farmers say dry conditions have led to a shortage of the starchy dinner staple, with thousands of acres of potato crops unharvested

Farmers across Canada left thousands of acres of potato crops unharvested after a slew of bad weather created challenging conditions, setting the stage for a possible shortage of the starchy dinner table staple.

"It's unprecedented. Never, never before have I seen this in my time," said Kevin MacIsaac, general manager of the United Potato Growers of Canada (UPGC), an organization that provides industry information to help farmers make production and marketing decisions. He's been with the organization for seven years and, before that, grew potatoes in Prince Edward Island, where he still lives.

Tornado2

Rare off-season tornado outbreak leaves central Illinois with damage, injuries

Illinois tornado

Andrew Pritchard, who goes by @skydrama on Twitter, captured this image of a tornado racing through Beardstown, Illinois, on Saturday.
Central Illinois is coping with damage and injuries after a rare blitz of tornadoes Saturday, when 22 twisters were reported to the National Weather Service.

Hardest hit was the town of Taylorville, about 30 miles southeast of the capital of Springfield. Storm winds wrecked houses, downed power lines and pulled trees up by the roots.

"It's a miracle no one was killed in the tragedy of these tornadoes," said Gov. Bruce Rauner, who toured the area on Sunday.

At least three people are being treated for major injuries at Memorial Hospital in Springfield and 18 more suffered minor injuries, Rauner said. The governor activated Illinois' State of Emergency Operations Center.

Rescuers pulled people from homes damaged by the twisters, Taylorville Fire Department Chief Mike Crews said. Otherwise, no deaths have been reported.

Illinois has an average of 47 tornadoes a year, not including December, which doesn't have an average, said CNN Meteorologist Allison Chinchar, speaking of the rarity of Saturday's twister cluster. May is the peak month, with an average of 15 tornadoes.


Info

Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Fuel first, food second - What will spark repeating cycles in the masses?

Perrysburg snow
© Josh Bazan ‏
Snow in Perrysburg.
Mind experiment; as you have seen French very upset about rising fuel prices when there is still available supply what do you think will happen when food triples in price and there is limited supply.

Climatologists coming out stating Water Vapor is the cause of the worlds warming and that the Atlantic is in the process of cooling on its 60 year cycle.

Changes all around as Chicago digs out from its record snowfall.


Sources

Ice Cube

Ice Age Farmer Report: "UNPRECEDENTED" - Why harvests failed in 2018 - Learning from the past

snow crop
Food shortages are happening around the world - prices are rising - and this will continue through the Grand Solar Minimum. Prepare now. Please share this information with those you love, and those who can think critically, put the pieces together, and start building a better future.


Sources

Comment: Read also: Europe's Little Ice Age: 'All things which grew above the ground died and starved'


Snowflake

Cold snap and dust storms blanket China's far northwest in 'yellow snow'

yellow snow
Some parts of northwestern China have been blanketed by "yellow snow", a phenomenon the meteorological authority said was due to a combination of cold weather mixed with sandstorms.

Snowfalls of 10-20cm (around 4-8 inches) were reported in the region's capital Urumqi and the cities of Shihezi and Changji on Saturday.

Residents found the surface of the snow was covered with a layer of dust but white underneath, a phenomenon some compared with tiramisu.

"Since last Friday, many places in Xinjiang have been hit by gales measured at force seven or above," He Qing, director of the Xinjiang Meteorological Administration, told the Xinhua news agency.


Arrow Down

Seven students killed in landslide at hot springs resort after heavy rainfall in North Sumatra, Indonesia

Government personnel in Karo regency
© JP/Apriadi Gunawan
Government personnel in Karo regency clean debris from a landslide that hit a hot springs resort in Semangat Gunung village on Sunday.
Seven university students were killed and nine others were injured in a landslide at a hot springs resort in Semangat Gunung village in Merdeka district, Karo regency, North Sumatra, on Sunday.

The bodies of all the victims were moved to Amanda Hospital in Berastagi, Karo, where seven of the injured students are also being treated. The remaining two injured students were sent to Efarina Hospital.

Karo Disaster Mitigation Agency (BPBD) head Martin Sitepu said five of the seven deceased victims had been identified. They were Emelita Ginting, Mones, Emiya Tarigan, Sartika Teresia Pinem and Sindy Simamora. All were students of Prima Indonesia University (Unpri) in Medan.

Martin said the 16 students were spending the night at the Daun Paris Raja Berneh hot springs resort when part of a cliff in the area collapsed at about 6 a.m. local time following heavy downpour in the region the night before.


Arrow Down

12-foot sinkhole swallows man's car in Jacksonville, Florida

sinkhole car
A 12-foot-sinkhole swallowed a man's car as he was driving to work Saturday morning on Clyde Drive near Lem Turner Road.

JEA said the car was spinning around in circles in the sinkhole when they arrived at the scene.

The driver wasn't hurt, but was shaken up.

"Next thing I know I just heard something go 'bam,' and the car just went up and under and started spinning," Tyrone Oakes said.

He said he climbed out of the driver's seat and on top of his car until the Jacksonville Fire and Rescue Department was able to pull him out of the hole.

"I was sitting on top of my car. They handed me the lifeline long pole, told me to jump, when I jumped I didn't feel the bottom," he said.


Cloud Precipitation

More flash flooding hits Saudi Arabia

Flash flooding in Yabu, Madinah on November 30, 2018
© Maycol Checchinato
Flash flooding in Yabu, Madinah on November 30, 2018.
Meteorologists in Saudi Arabia have issued a red warning for heavy rain in Madinah province.

Civil defense teams have been deployed in preparation to respond to any flooding.

Heavy rain has caused flooding across the Kingdom in recent weeks with a number of fatalities and disruption for transport.

The General Authority of Meteorology and Environmental Protection said Friday further torrential rain was forecast for several regions of the Kingdom.


They include Tabuk, Madinah and its coastal areas, Al-Jouf, the Northern Border Region and Hail. Thunderstorms are also expected in the Makkah area, including its coastal areas, as well as in the southwestern highlands.

Maj. Abdulaziz bin Farhan Al-Shammari, a civil defense spokesman in Tabuk, said they were working on clearing recent floodwaters in inundated areas, valleys and coastlines throughout the province.