Earth Changes
Oklahoma's Wildland Task Force was deployed as local fire crews battled flames than spanned across an estimated 1,200 acres near County Road 73 and Post Road.
Guthrie Fire Chief, Eric Harlow says more than 20 agencies assisted in the effort to bring flames under control. Two dozen homes were evacuated as a precautionary measure.
Harlow says strong winds caused hot spots from a Saturday fire in Logan County to flare up into a massive fire around noon Sunday.
Clouds of smoke could be seen from miles away, strong winds gusting more than 30 miles per hour swept the fire within five feet of Ralph Hanley's home.
"We came out here and all this here had been burned off," said Hanley, pointing to his backyard, "our neighbors had come over and fought the fire to keep it away from the house."

A municipal worker talks on a mobile phone next to a whale on Jan 12, 2014 as its body is being removed from the water a day after appearing at the shore of Carrasco beach in Montevideo, Uruguay. Authorities in Uruguay on Sunday recovered the body of a 16-meter sperm whale, normally at home in deep waters, after it beached near the capital.
Using a crane, the authorities moved the animal from the shallow waters onto the beach off Carrasco, an upscale town just next to Montevideo.
"The body will remain on the beach until Monday," said navy spokesman Gaston Jaunsolo.
Traffic tied up in the area as curious locals stopped to watch and catch a glimpse of the unusual sight.
"I don't ever recall another sighting of a sperm whale here; they are from very deep waters," Rodrigo Garcia, from the whale protection organization, said of the adult male that apparently beached on Saturday.
Authorities were expected to investigate the cause of death.
Garcia said that the animal did not appear to have any apparent external injuries, and that like dolphins they are highly sensitive to sound.
Source: Agence France Presse

A marine rescue worker photographs a sperm whale that washed up on Portobello beach in Edinburgh, Scotland
Pictures showed the young whale in shallow waters off Portobello beach on the outskirts of the Scottish capital.

Members of the public look at the dead sperm whale that washed ashore near Portobello beach, Edinburgh
'On arrival it was clear life was extinct, so there was no need to mount a rescue operation,' explained SAW Chief Superintendent David Drummond.

The United States is facing an epidemic of herbicide-resistant "superweeds" that some activists and researchers are blaming on GMOs
According to a recent study, the situation is such that American farmers are "heading for a crisis."
Many scientists blame overuse of herbicides, prompted by seeds genetically modified to resist them.
"In parts of the country, weeds resistant to the world's most popular herbicide, glyphosate, now grow in the vast majority of soybean, cotton, and corn fields," many of which were planted with seeds resistant to the weedkiller, said the study published in the journal Science in September.
Earlier this month, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced it was considering the release of new genetically-engineered seeds that are resistant to multiple herbicides.
But "weeds that can shrug off multiple other herbicides are also on the rise," the study said.

Power lines down on Hala Holopeka, one of the main roads on the eastern side of Ha'apai.
The full extent of damage is still unclear as the storm, now downgraded to category three, moves away from Tonga and out into the open ocean.
The huge storm, described as the worst to hit Tonga in decades, slammed into the northern islands on Saturday before moving on to the main island overnight.
Houses have been flattened, roofs blown away and trees and power lines brought down.
The Sun in December 2013: Coming Back To Life
By Frank Bosse and Fritz Vahrenholt
(Translated and edited by P Gosselin)
For solar observers there was quite a bit of activity last month, namely sunspots, and not too few of them. Activity even reached 84% of the mean value calculated from cycles 1-23. With an official SSN (sunspot number) of 90.3 the sun reached a second peak in December 2013, see the following chart:
As far as sunspot activity is concerned, the peak was comparable to what we observed 25 months ago (November 2011), but this time most activity occurring in the sun's southern hemisphere: 82%. In the sun's first cycle 24 outbreak, most of the activity happened in the northern hemisphere.
"We just don't know why," said owner Michelle Hudson
Michelle Hudson is hurt and confused after finding two of her pet donkeys dead on their property on New Year's Day.
"Marley we found just laying dead right over there on New Year's Day and then yesterday morning, I found Chester right down there, one they're healthy running around doing there normal little thing and then I find them laying dead," said donkey owner Butch Hudson.
While the scenario is different these aren't the first donkeys to be found dead in the area.

Rainy weather in Finland is said to have brought many bears out of hibernation early.
On the back of a generally mild winter, there have been reports of bears emerging early from hibernation in Finland, changes in the behaviour of migratory birds off the coast of Sweden and plants appearing earlier than normal in Norway. Scandinavia and Russia's cold weather during the winter comes from a high-pressure system that keeps warmer, more humid air and low-pressure systems with wind and rain from coming up from the Atlantic Ocean.
The weakening of the jetstream that holds this in place has allowed cold air to spill further south into much of the United States and Canada, while bringing above-average temperatures to parts of Europe.
"We are unable to clear the highway as it is still snowing," said Keshav Bohara, inspector at the District Police Office (DPO) of Dadeldhura. "We will start clearing the highway only when it stops snowing." Heaps of snow can be seen in Saukharka and Hugulte areas of the highway; and vehicles are now trapped between these two places. There is no way out for them as long as it keeps snowing in the hilly region.
There are fears the port may have to be quarantined to prevent the disease spreading.
Hundreds of thousands of Pacific oysters have died since late last year.
''We lost 600,000 oysters over a couple of weeks. We were struggling to find any live ones to be honest,'' veteran Salamander Bay oyster grower Robert Diemar said.
''We haven't seen anything like it before.''
Pacific oysters, which are worth about $3million to the Port Stephens oyster industry, had been recovering from a disease that swept through the region last year.
To date, it appears the latest disease has affected only hatchery-sourced Pacific oysters.
However, it is feared it may also attack prime Sydney rock oyster crops in the port.










Comment: First fireballs, then an eruption of wildfires... Coincidence?