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Fri, 05 Nov 2021
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Ice Cube

Pine Glacier sheds another block of ice, a glacial 'aftershock'

Pine Glacier
© NASA Earth Observatory image by Jesse Allen
Pine Glacier shows cracks in the ice shelf.
Antarctica's fastest melting glacier, the large ice stream Pine Island Glacier, has shed another block of ice into Antarctic waters. The glacier, responsible for about 25% of Antarctica's ice loss, spawned an iceberg after "a kilometre or two" of ice broke off from the shelf's front. While the loss was miniscule compared to previous giant ice losses, it presents further evidence of the ice shelf's fragility, according to NASA.

The break was about ten times smaller than an event in July 2015 which saw a 30-kilometer-long (20-mile) rift develop below the ice surface before breaking through and calving an iceberg spanning 583 square kilometers (225 square miles).

"I think this event is the calving equivalent of an 'aftershock' following the much bigger event," Ian Howat, a glaciologist at Ohio State University, said. "Apparently, there are weaknesses in the ice shelf—just inland of the rift that caused the 2015 calving—that are resulting in these smaller breaks."

Comment: See also:


Cloud Precipitation

Update: "ROCK SHOT" at Oroville Dam: Repair before more rain overtops spillway again

 Oroville Dam

Oroville Dam
UPDATE Assessment of ROCK SHOT Success as 3-6 Inches of Rain Blanket California. With less than a day left before new storms roll over California dumping 3-6 inches of new rainfall, which will over top the Oroville Emergency Spillway again. They are now dropping bags of rocks in the areas where the dam will collapse, I call it the "ROCK SHOT" which reminds me of the "Junk Shot" in the BP Oil Spill.

GOES WEST rainfall forecast maps as well. Once you leave your homes you will not be allowed to return for weeks if at all until spring. Good Luck.


Sources

Comment: Meanwhile Los Angeles area braces for what could be biggest storm of the season; flooding, mudslides possible


Bizarro Earth

Los Angeles area braces for what could be biggest storm of the season; flooding, mudslides possible

Los Angeles rain
© Al Seib / Los Angeles Times
A rainstorm is expected to hit Southern California by Friday. A flash flood watch was issued for burn areas in Los Angeles and Ventura counties.
A powerful new storm is expected to arrive in Southern California on Friday, and it could provide a walloping, with possible flash flooding, mudslides and rock slides.

"The Friday storm in particular could in fact become the strongest of the season in the Los Angeles region," said UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain.

A slow-moving storm is expected to debut in the Southland with some light rain Thursday night or Friday morning, but is expected to dump large amounts of rain in a short time frame during its peak Friday afternoon and evening, said Ryan Kittell, a forecaster with the National Weather Service in Oxnard.

Rainfall totals for the Los Angeles metropolitan area are predicted to be between 2 to 4 inches, with 6 to 8 inches expected in the mountains and foothills, he said.

Bizarro Earth

At least one killed, 10 injured after Saudi's Asir region hit by floods

saudi flooding
© Twitter
At least one person has been killed and 10 injured after severe floods hit Saudi's Asir region on Wednesday, according to local reports. The Saudi Civil Defense said the agency rescued over 280 people from the region, reported local daily Arab News.

The agency also said it received more than 900 emergency calls in the southern cities of Abha and Khamis Mushayt. Social media was filled with pictures of flooded roads, with several cars completely submerged in water.

Dig

20-meter deep sinkhole swallows part of road in Vladivostock, Russia

Vladistock sinkhole
© Ruptly
A vast sinkhole estimated to be 15 meters wide and 20 meters deep has caused a major road collapse in the city of Vladivostok in Russia's Far East.

The incident took place during excavation works while a building was being constructed, the local administration said on its website.

People at the nearby Seaside Regional Institute of Education Development were evacuated following the collapse. The collapsed part of the road was cordoned off by police.


"It all happened during a lunch break... We heard a loud noise and looked in the window - a concrete wall collapsed in the abyss [on the road]. Then a big sinkhole began to form on the road," an eyewitness told TASS.

Ice Cube

New Orwellian meaning of 'ice free' - One million square kilometers of ice is considered 'ice free'?

polar bears
The Guardian today enthused about a new study proposing a £400 billion (US$500 billion) plan to refreeze the Arctic "before the ice melts." Physicist Steven Desch and his colleagues at Arizona State University want to replenish Arctic sea ice "by building 10 million wind-powered pumps over the Arctic ice cap," the Guardian reports.

"The pumps could add an extra metre (3 ft) of sea ice to the Arctic's current layer, Desch argues. The current cap rarely exceeds 2-3 metres in thickness and is being eroded constantly as the planet succumbs to climate change." "The 2015 Paris agreement to limit global warming will be insufficient to prevent the region's sea ice disappearing completely in summer, possibly by 2030," said Desch. "Thicker ice would mean longer-lasting ice."

Reminds me of Al Gore's ridiculous 2007, 2008 and 2009 assertions that the Arctic could expect ice-free summers by 2013. The article goes on to bemoan the "paucity of sea ice," warning that "most scientists expect that, at current emission rates, the Arctic will be reliably free of sea ice in summer by 2030."

"By "free", the article continues, "they mean there will be less than 1m sq km of sea ice left in the Arctic." Did you catch that? Words are so conveniently malleable, aren't they? They want us to accept their definition that "ice-free" means there will be less than one million square kilometers of sea ice left in the Arctic.

Comment: Greenland ice sheet defying alarmist predictions, shows massive growth this season


Attention

Farmer critically injured by wild boar in Odisha, India

Wild boar
A 22-year-old farmer was injured after a wild boar attacked him at Suniti village within Mahakalpada police station jurisdiction, police said.

The incident occurred yesterday when Budhadeb Bera (22) was returning home after working in his field.

"The animal might haves sneaked into the village to eat crops and standing vegetable plants as the place is located in close vicinity of forest areas and habitation corridors of these animals," said Divisional Forest Officer, Bimal Prasana Acharya.

Bera was critically injured and was hospitalised.

Question

Source of earth-shaking 'explosion' remains a mystery in Orangeburg County, South Carolina

boom
A loud explosion heard Saturday in some parts of Orangeburg County remained a mystery Monday.

The explosion was reportedly heard in the Eutawville, Cope, Cordova and Norway areas, causing the ground to shake.

"It was significant," Orangeburg County Chief Fire Operations Officer Teddy Wolfe said, noting he heard it from his residence in Eutawville. "I would like to know what it was."

The Orangeburg County Fire District, however, did not receive any reports of a fire or explosion.


The South Carolina Department of Natural Resources State Geologist Charles William "Bill" Clendenin Jr. said there were no reports of earthquake activity that came across his desk for Saturday.

The South Carolina Emergency Management Division and the Orangeburg County Emergency Services Department said they did not receive any reports either.

Arrow Down

Sinkholes and cracks in the ground plague Cho Don, Vietnam; over 20 found in a month

Sink holes have been appearing over the past month in the Cho Don District of the northern mountain province of Bac Kan, generating anxiety among local residents.
© vnexpress.net
Sink holes have been appearing over the past month in the Cho Don District of the northern mountain province of Bac Kan, generating anxiety among local residents.
Sink holes have been appearing over the past month in the Cho Don District of the northern mountain province of Bac Kan, generating anxiety among local residents.

According to a preliminary survey by the district's People's Committee, more than 20 holes were found in the district, with each measuring 2-5 metres in width and 2-3 metres in depth.

Ban Tan Hamlet in Bang Lung Town has suffered the most. It has recorded more than 10 land subsidence spots. Some of the sinkholes appeared in springs, diverting all their water under ground. Over the past 10 days, some springs in the district have dried up, leading to water shortage for daily activities as well as irrigation.

Cracks have also appeared, with some measuring hundreds of metres in length.


Hoang Van Trieu, a farmer in Ban Tan Hamlet, said he was very anxious because big holes appeared in his fishing ponds while cracks were recorded in his garden, fields and the foundation of his house.

Arrow Down

Three tow trucks remove car from 20-ft sinkhole in Wilkesboro, North Carolina

Sinkhole in Wilkesboro, NC
© Jule Hubbard
Three tow trucks were used to keep an unoccupied Oldsmobile Alero from falling into a sinkhole in the Taco Bell parking lot near the intersection of U.S. 421 West and Winkler Mill Road in Wilkesboro about 8 a.m. Monday.

Asphalt had collapsed beneath both tires on the driver's side of the Oldsmobile and it was at risk of falling into the hole by 7 a.m. Monday.

Two conventional tow trucks, one at the front and the other at the rear of the Oldsmobile, were used to left up the car while a rollback tow truck was used to pull it in the direction of the passenger's side and onto the flatbed of the rollback.

A spokesman for Champion Towing in Wilkesboro, which had the rollback and one of the other tow trucks on the scene, said the Oldsmobile was removed from the hole without a scratch. The other tow truck was from Southeastern Cars & Parts in Ronda.

People on the scene Monday morning said the hole could easily be jumped across when it first appeared Sunday. It was at least 20 feet deep and the opening in the asphalt was at least 10 feet across by 8 a.m. Monday, but it was even wider immediately beneath the asphalt.