Earth Changes
Rivers overflowed and flooded 58 cities and towns across the far-southern state of Rio Grande do Sul, the state's Civil Defense Agency said in a statement.
The normal high for this time of year is 69 degrees. But National Weather Service meteorologist Walter Fitzgerald said hot air circulating clockwise out of the Gulf of Mexico led to the record-tying temperatures.
The last time Cleveland hit 88 degrees on Sept. 25, Germany had a kaiser, Russia had a czar and the United States had Ohioan William McKinley as president.
The record was tied with a 7 a.m. reading.
Similar temperatures prevailed throughout the region, but temperatures remained balmy enough - barely - for flowers, tomatoes, and soybeans to survive.
With the temperature reaching as high as 33 in Toronto, not only did the city have the warmest Sept. 25 on record (the old standard, in 1958, was 28.3), it was the highest temperature for any fall day dating back to the beginning of record keeping in 1840.
This story first began after the Labor Day Weekend. The strike left behind the mysterious trench that has family members checking for any damage to their families graves.
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| ©Alan Sealls, WKRG-TV |
| Lightning trench in West Mobile created when lightning struck tree, travelled down to ground and then horizonatally just below ground surface. |
The finding not only has implications for worldwide amphibian declines, but could shine light on such diseases as cholera, malaria, West Nile virus and diseases affecting coral reefs, said assistant professor Pieter Johnson of the University of Colorado's ecology and evolutionary biology department.
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| ©Pieter Johnson / University Of Colorado |
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| ©11Alive.com |
| The 9-legged frog is raising concerns about a former landfill. |
Looking from above, the frog may seem normal. But with a closer look, it's clear there is a problem.









Comment: Hard to believe the Neocons have the time to visit South Africa regularly.