Welcome to Sott.net
Fri, 05 Nov 2021
The World for People who Think

Earth Changes
Map

Wolf

3.2 million animals slaughtered by U.S. Wildlife Services in 2015

Red fox
© Pexels
Red fox
The highly secretive arm of the U.S. Department of Agriculture known as Wildlife Services killed more than 3.2 million animals during fiscal year 2015, according to new data released by the agency.

The total number of wolves, coyotes, bears, mountain lions, beavers, foxes, eagles and other animals killed largely at the behest of the livestock industry and other agribusinesses represents a half-million-animal increase more than the 2.7 million animals the agency killed in 2014.

Despite increasing calls for reform a century after the federal wildlife-killing program began in 1915, the latest kill report indicates that the program's reckless slaughter continues, including 385 gray wolves, 68,905 coyotes (plus an unknown number of pups in 492 destroyed dens), 480 black bears, 284 mountain lions, 731 bobcats, 492 river otters (all but 83 killed "unintentionally"), 3,437 foxes, two bald eagles and 21,559 beavers. The program also killed 20,777 prairie dogs outright, plus an unknown number killed in more than 59,000 burrows that were destroyed or fumigated.

Bizarro Earth

South Kyrgyzstan struck by strong 6.3-magnitude earthquake

Kyrgyzstan earthquake
© USGS
A strong 6.3-magnitude earthquake struck southern Kyrgyzstan on Sunday, the European Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC) said.

The quake was registered at 11:17 GMT at the depth of 12 miles. It hit some 75 miles southeast from the Central Asian nation's second largest city of Osh, with a population of 200,000.

Tremors were felt wide across the region, with shocks reaching nearby Kazakhstan, a RIA Novosti correspondent in the Kazakh city Almaty said.

There were no immediate reports of casualties or damage from Kyrgyzstan's Emergencies Ministry.

Cloud Precipitation

Update: 23 dead in West Virginia as more 'historic' flooding sweeps the U.S.

West Virginia floods
© CBS News
West Virginia State Trooper C.S. Hartman uses a boat to navigate the flooded streets of Rainelle, W. Va., on Saturday, June 25, 2016.
A state of emergency has been declared in 44 of 55 counties in West Virginia in the wake of storms and floods that hit the state on Thursday night. Nearly two dozen people have died, while hundreds were trapped inside a shopping mall cut off by the flooding.

The death toll from the floods has climbed to 23, a spokesperson for West Virginia's Homeland Security and Emergency Management said Friday night, noting that the hardest hit area is in Greenbrier County in the southeastern part of the state, where at least 15 people have died.

About 500 people became stranded inside a shopping mall in the town of Elkview, some 12 miles (19km) from the state's capital, Charleston, on Thursday. Employees and customers became trapped inside Crossings Mall after a bridge that connected the center to a main road collapsed.


Comment: Governor declares state of emergency in 44 counties following floods in West Virginia; 7 inches of rain in 3 hours

In recent months the United States has experienced some extreme rainfall related weather events including: "once-in-a-thousand-year" flash flooding in South Carolina; more 'historic' flooding in the southern states, massive flooding and mudslides in southern California and record rainfall in Texas.


Attention

Dead humpback whale discovered outside Shinnecock Inlet in Southampton, New York

Whale
A dead humpback whale was found just outside the Shinnecock Inlet in Southampton.
© Southampton Town Bay Constable
A dead humpback whale was found just outside the Shinnecock Inlet in Southampton.
A dead humpback whale was spotted floating in the water on Friday about a half mile outside of the Shinnecock Inlet in Southampton.

The cause of death for the whale was not immediately clear, as the Riverhead Foundation for Marine Research and Preservation did not send out a team to investigate as of Friday afternoon, according to Rachel Bosworth, a spokesperson for the foundation.

Ms. Bosworth also did not know the gender or size of the whale.

Southampton Town officials and marine patrol were also notified of the dead whale.

At the request of town officials, Ms. Bosworth said the foundation will likely be waiting to access the whale until it washes up on the shore instead of towing it in.

Source: The Southampton Press

Cloud Lightning

Lightning strikes kill 8 in Bangladesh

Lightning
At least eight people were killed as flashes of lightning struck them in Chapainawabganj and Sunamganj districts on Thursday evening, reports news agency UNB.

In Chapainawabganj, five people, including a girl, were killed and another person was injured in separate lightning strikes at Jaminpur village of Binodpur union and Dhurlavpur union of Shibganj upazila.

Four of the deceased were identified as Rafiqul Islam, 45, son of Jonjali of Jaminpur village, Buli Khatun, 11, daughter of Tajemul

Haque of Dhurlavpur Bazar area, Taleb Ali Sardar, 55, son of Ahmed Sarder of Shibchar upazila, and Harun Khan, 60, son of Sonamuddi Khan of Kalnini upazila in Madaripur district.

Nuke

Environmentalists triumph: PG&E will close Diablo Canyon nuclear plant in 2025

Diablo Canyon
© Wikimedia
Diablo Canyon Power Plant, near Avila Beach on CA's central coast.
Saying that it was an American Fukushima waiting to happen, environmentalists throughout California and elsewhere have long been putting pressure on Pacific Gas & Electric to fully shut down the Diablo Canyon Power Plant in San Luis Obispo County, and today PG&E is making the official announcement. Rather than try to extend California's only remaining nuclear power facility any further, the plant will cease operations in 2025. As the Chronicle reports, reps from the utility flew in to the plant Tuesday to hold a series of meetings with its staff.

map Diablo
© PG&E
Interactive map, see link in text.
Diablo Canyon, which in the years since it began operations in 1973 has become a flashpoint in the anti-nuke movement, is notably surrounded by fault lines on nearly all sides. Experts discovered more faults over the years, as an interactive map on SFGate shows, with some underwater faults having previously caused earthquakes of up to 7.3 magnitude.

These days, PG&E downplays the potential for major shaking at the site — and it was the ensuing tsunami that caused much of the trouble at Fukushima, after all. The reason for the closure decision, says PG&E, is that renewable energy sources will all but render the power generated at Diablo Canyon unnecessary, especially by the middle of the next decade. The plant current generates 8.6 percent of the state's power, but the rise of energy-efficient homes and offices, the use of solar and wind power, and the rise of public power projects like San Francisco's CleanPowerSF will mean that the plant won't even need to operate the full year in the coming years. Further, PG&E says it will entirely replace the energy from Diablo with sources that do not produce carbon dioxide, with 55 percent of the utility's total electricity coming from renewables by 2031.

Comment: A thing of the past. Competition from power plants burning cheap natural gas has driven several older nuclear plants out of business. What happens when the site closes? No new licenses (which expire in 2024 and 2025) will be taken out, dismantled remains will be loaded on trains and shipped out of state with scrap metal to Nevada, low level radioactive waste to Utah or Texas, concrete rubble to a disposal site out of state, spent fuel rods will be stored on site until picked up by the Dept. of Energy.


Cloud Lightning

Lightning bolt kills 14 cattle in Ghana

The dead cattle

The dead cattle
About 14 cattle were left dead after lightning struck at Welembelle in the Sissala East District of the Upper West Region Thursday.

A native and teacher in the community, Jonas, told StarrFMonline.com the incident happened at about 10:30pm. He said they saw the lifeless bodies of the animals after the downpour.

"We were there this morning and one caretaker of the cattle, a Fulani, came to inform us that some of the cattle are dead, so we rushed to the place and met exactly what the caretaker had said.

"Usually, when things of such nature occur certain rituals are performed before anyone touches it for fear of being struck by lightning, so the rituals were performed after which the cattle were buried," Jonas narrated.

He added that residents of the community have been shocked at the huge number of the dead cattle, as a minimal number is often killed under such circumstances.

Owner of the cattle, Samba is reportedly traumatized at his loss.

Blue Planet

Study: Chance of mega-earthquake in Aleutians

Aleutians and Hawaii sat image
© www.dailymail.co.uk
There's a nine percent chance a magnitude 9 or larger earthquake will strike the Aleutian Islands in the next 50 years. That is the prediction offered by scientists from the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa -- made with the help of a newly designed computer model. Researchers say an earthquake of that size could send a mega-tsunami in the direction of the Hawaiian Islands.

The Aleutian Islands, which stretch toward Russia from the coast of Alaska, sit along a subduction zone at the convergence of the Pacific and North American tectonic plates. Scientists say the chance of a dramatic slip along the fault lines that make up the subduction zone is significant.

They detailed the threat of a mega-earthquake in a new paper, published this week in the Journal of Geophysical Research - Solid Earth.

"Necessity is the mother of invention," lead study author Rhett Butler, a geophysicist at the UHM School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology, explained in a news release. "Having no recorded history of mega tsunamis in Hawaii, and given the tsunami threat to Hawai'i, we devised a model for Magnitude 9 earthquake rates following upon the insightful work of David Burbidge and others."

Researchers integrated fault system measurements -- fault length and convergence rate -- with Bayesian probability models, and then tested the predictions against historic tectonic events. Researchers compared the simulation to recent catastrophic earthquake and tsunami events, including Sumatra-Andaman in 2004; Alaska in 1964; Chile in 1960; and Kamchatka in 1952. "These five events represent half of the seismic energy that has been released globally since 1900," said Butler. "The events differed in details, but all of them generated great tsunamis that caused enormous destruction."

Researchers further refined the model by incorporating ancient evidence of tsunami events found in the archaeological and geologic records. "We were surprised and pleased to see how well the model actually fit the paleotsunami data," concluded Butler. The scientists are now working to augment the model in order to predict smaller earthquakes.

Comment: The future event was calculated to affect 300,000 people at a cost of $40 billion.They then validated the model using data from the five largest earthquakes since 1900 - Tohoku, 2011; Sumatra-Andaman, 2004; Alaska, 1964; Chile, 1960; and Kamchatka, 1952.


Cloud Lightning

Lightning bolt kills one and injures two in Daytona Beach, Florida

Lightning
A 33-year-old woman is dead after lightning struck her on the shore of Daytona Beach Shores Friday, officials said.

The unidentified woman was standing in ankle-deep water with a man shortly before 5 p.m. when "a bolt of lightning came out of nowhere," Volusia County Beach Safety Capt. Tamra Marris said.

The woman was taken for medical treatment, but died just before midnight, Marris said. The man's condition has not been released.

A third victim - a 55-year-old Daytona Beach woman - was also struck by the same bolt. She is OK and "was able to walk away and seek medical attention elsewhere," Marris said

Marris said storms had been brewing near the beach but when the lightning bolt struck, storms were off in the distance.

Officials are not naming or releasing further information about the victims until they can notify all family members.

Ambulance

Service dog killed protecting her owner from alligator in Port LaBelle, Florida

Precious

Precious
A man is pleading with officials in Glades County for a code inspection after his dog was eaten by an alligator at the marina where he resides.

"Precious" the pit bull kept Robert Lineburger safe by sensing his seizures before they happened, but now she's buried in his front yard.

Lineburger lives on his boat at the Port LaBelle Marina. One April night when he left to use the restroom, his pet followed.

The dog's owner said his pet saved him from the alligator, which tried to bite him on the dock.