Earth Changes
Footage shows people desperately forming a human chain to drag Maria da Silva, 73, from the passenger side of the sunken car in Brazil.
Her 76-year-old husband, Osvaldo, was pulled from the driver's seat just 30 seconds before the Nissan Frontier plunged deeper into the crater on Tuesday afternoon following heavy rains.
The majority of the victims are believed to be students who were heading to a picnic at hot springs as part of a school trip. The witnesses said that the floodwaters swept their bus into a valley as it was approaching a resort area.
A major search operation has been launched to locate 37 students and seven adults, who were missing following the incident.
Israeli Defense Force has also sent its troops to assist in the search on the request of the Jordanian authorities.
The quake was reported around 11:30 p.m. and originated about 6 miles north of Oakhurst, with a depth of about 27 miles. It was felt as far as Mariposa.
Carole Early, 77, lives in Oakhurst's China Creek area and said she and her husband heard the quake more than they felt it. She believed it to be a "sonic boom" and equated the shake to a "propane truck" passing by.
"We were watching some comedy and our first thought was 'Who's delivering gas at this time at night?'" Early said. "Then I heard a crack and everything blinked. The lights in our house kind of flashed."
The two women had just finished work when they fell victim to the horrifying ordeal.
Video footage shows them walking down the road talking and appearing to enjoy themselves.
But as they were speaking, the ground from below collapsed under their feet.
A huge gaping hole then opened up and the two plunged into the gap.
Winter may officially be over, but heavy snow has started to fall near Queenstown as heavy rain drenches the South Island.
Australian tourists told Newshub they were loving the snow on the Crown Ranges. One said it was his son's first time seeing it.
"It's pretty exciting mate, for an Australian, it's magical, unreal," one man says.
"Two days ago we were sitting in 27 degrees," another told Newshub.
The girl, identified as Hatice Aydoğdu, was waiting for her school shuttle when a pitbull accompanied by a stray dog ran up to her and bit her repeatedly.
Sinem Aydoğdu, the girl's mother, quickly tried to save her daughter but could not stop the dog for several minutes.

This satellite image, from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, shows the moment the eye of Super Typhoon Yutu passed directly over Tinian, in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, early Thursday, just before 2 a.m.
With sustained winds of 178 mph as its eye passed directly over the island of Tinian, Super Typhoon Yutu was the strongest storm on record to ever hit U.S. soil and tied for the most powerful storm on earth in 2018, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
"Tinian has been devastated by Typhoon Yutu," Mayor Joey P. San Nicolas said Thursday. "The homes, main roads have been destroyed. Our critical infrastructure has been compromised. We currently have no power and water. Our ports at this time are inaccessible and several points within the island are inaccessible."
The power plant has been damaged, and the power "distribution system is completely destroyed," San Nicolas said.
San Nicolas, a former attorney general for the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, said he sent out a request for commodities to be brought to Tinian, like drinking water and ready-to-eat meals.
With no running water, Tinian stores have not reopened.
He said roads are being cleared of debris, and Tinian's airport runway is now usable.
President Donald Trump issued an emergency disaster declaration on Wednesday for Saipan and Tinian, along with the rest of the Northern Marianas, in anticipation of the typhoon.
Parts of Maine have received their first significant snowfall of the season.
According to the National Weather Service, Rangeley received 5 inches, Sherman 7 inches, and Patten 6.5 inches. The NWS in Gray also cites social media's report of 12 inches in Upton.
Police reported several accidents on slippery roads.

Fire ravaging the First Baptist Church in Wakefield, Massachusetts, October 24, 2018
The fire erupted around 7:30pm Tuesday. However, when fire engines arrived, the 180-foot landmark was already fully engulfed in flames and could not be saved. Witnesses say the fire was caused by lightning that hit the church's steeple and spread rapidly.
"I saw the lightning strike the steeple, and we saw the smoke and it just went up in flames fast," local Christian Bruno told CBS Boston.
Miraculously, no one was injured in the blaze, although there were classes taking place inside the church at the time.
In half an hour, the raging inferno devoured the spire of the church, which then collapsed.
Comment: The loading of cometary dust in our atmosphere and our increasingly quiescent sun is changing the behavior of lightning as we know it:
- Lightning strikes children in Paris and Germany, over 40 injured; bolt kills man in Poland
- Lightning strike burns house down in Scotland
- 'Mother of all thunderstorms': UK hit by up to 20,000 lightning strikes overnight
- At least 14 people killed as 41,025 bolts of lightning strike in 16 hours across Andhra Pradesh, India
- Two children struck dead by lightning bolt in Kenya
- Woman on morning walk killed by lightning bolt in Sweden, another person seriously injured













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