Earth Changes
The warning, which expired at 9 a.m, was issued as the waterspout came shore. The National Weather Service warned beachgoers between 61st and 91st streets to seek shelter.
A tornado warning was also issued through 9 a.m. Sunday.

Ryan Wunsch posted this photo of tennis-ball-sized hail about 13 kilometres south of Tompkins, Sask., just after 5 p.m. CST on Tuesday.
Photos of hail the size of baseballs were circulating on social media from places like Strongfield and Stewart Valley, but there were plenty of tennis-ball-sized hailstones, too.
Large hail along the South Sask near Outlook #skstorm #cannonball @jbarton9 video pic.twitter.com/lpJ8xMEcLF
— Michelle Barton (@michellebar10) July 20, 2016
Here's Environment Canada's roundup of hail in Saskatchewan from July 19, 2016:
Herschel: golf ball size
Carmichael: golf ball size
Tompkins area: tennis ball size
Bounty: golf ball size
Outlook: tennis ball size to softball size
Stewart Valley: baseball size
Broderick: Loonie size
Strongfield: baseball size
On Tuesday the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said that June was the 14th consecutive month with record high temperatures. April 2015 was the last month when the Earth did not encounter any record high temperatures.
"The globally averaged temperature over land and ocean surfaces for June 2016 was the highest for the month of June in the NOAA global temperature dataset record, which dates back to 1880," the agency said in a statement.
"This marks the 14th consecutive month the monthly global temperature record has been broken, the longest such streak in the 137-year record."
2016-07-20 15:13:16 UTC
UTC time: Wednesday, July 20, 2016 15:13 PM
Your time: 2016-07-20T15:13:16Z
Magnitude Type: mwb
USGS page: M 6.0 - 76km NNW of Isangel, Vanuatu
USGS status: Reviewed by a seismologist
Reports from the public: 1 person

What is it? Zhang Chuanzhou and Zhang Xiaogang caught the fish in Wuhan, China's Hubei Province
The mysterious creature was caught on July 16 in Wuhan, Hubei Province, and measured seven feet in length and 220 pounds in weight, reported People's Daily Online.
Pictures of the river fish have been widely shared online in China while media are claiming that the species might date back to the age of dinosaurs.
Chief Rick Livingston of Mills River Fire and Rescue said a pickup truck and trailer, with eight horses tied to the trailer, were parked at the parking lot at the Turkey Pen trailhead in Pisgah National Forest just outside Mills River when a sudden, localized thunderstorm formed.
Lightning struck a large tree about 50 feet away from the horse trailer. The bolt traveled across the ground to the horses, killing one and injuring several others, though the injured horses are expected to be fine.
Livingston said it was just a "freak accident."
The seismic swarm has been concentrated on the fault lines between Los Angeles and San Francisco.
RT correspondent Brigida Santos has the report and says that the US Geological Survey does not believe this is evidence of a big earthquake occurring in the near future.
Asked about the reported earthquake on Monday, a public information officer for the Navy's Sea Systems Command in Washington, DC said the agency was working on a statement it expects to release this week.
The civilization that once thrived around Lake Poopó was forced to leave when the waterway dwindled, dying a slow death that was blamed on a lethal combination of drought, changing climate and failures by the government to keep it alive. Sitting more than 12,000 feet above sea level, Poopó shrunk for years before vanishing entirely just months ago.
According to the New York Times, climate change ultimately proved too devastating for the lake to survive. Since 1985, the lake warmed nearly half a degree Fahrenheit each decade, and the evaporation got worse and worse. Periodically, the lake would be nearly empty and the fish would die, and now the fishers are on their way out, officially becoming the latest refugees of climate change.
"The lake was our mother and our father," Adrián Quispe, a fisherman who lives in Llapallapani, told the Times. "Without this lake, where do we go?"
Researchers from the International Fund for Animal Welfare said they would transport the animal to the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, where they can perform a necropsy to figure out what happened to it.
Kristen Patchett, stranding coordinator for the IFAW, said the whale is believed to be an older male weighing about 4,500 pounds.
A person who was walking reported the whale at about 7 a.m. Monday, said Chatham's assistant harbormaster, Jim Horne.
Patchett said the person believed the whale was alive at the time, but it was dead when researchers reached it shortly after.














Comment: See also: Earthquake swarm hits central California