Earth ChangesS


Red Flag

Tigers under threat from disappearing mangrove forest

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© Photograph: Piyal Adhikary/EPAA tiger roams within the Sunderban, some 140 km south of Calcutta.
Report shows vast forest, shared by India and Bangladesh, is being rapidly destroyed by environmental change

A vast mangrove forest shared by India and Bangladesh that is home to possibly 500 Bengal tigers is being rapidly destroyed by erosion, rising sea levels and storm surges, according to a major study by researchers at the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) and others.

The Sundarbans forest took the brunt of super cyclone Sidr in 2007, but new satellite studies show that 71% of the forested coastline is retreating by as much as 200 metres a year. If erosion continues at this pace, already threatened tiger populations living in the forests will be put further at risk.

Attention

Enormous sinkhole swallows buildings in Guangzhou, China

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© Weibo
Several buildings have fallen into an enormous sinkhole in Guangzhou, China, destroying at least five shops and taking out power for 3,000 residential units nearby, Shanghaiist reports.

The sink hole was 300 square meters wide (3229.2 square feet), and appears to be growing. Thankfully there does not appear to be any injuries at present.

This video shows the moment the sinkhole expanded, taking out much of the building and creating a chaotic scene.


Comment: We find it interesting that the number of sinkholes are increasing... is the planet literally 'opening up'?


Bizarro Earth

Sea change: The Bay of Bengal's vanishing islands

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© Photograph: Salman SaeedDisappearing world … a project for climate refugees near Cox's Bazar, as people have been forced from islands such as Kutubdia in the Bay of Bengal.
Rapid erosion and rising sea levels are increasingly threatening the existence of islands off the coast of Bangladesh and India

School teacher Nurul Hashem lives in a grass hut set among coconut palms and pine trees, just yards from a pristine beach on the sparkling Bay of Bengal. It sounds idyllic, but he longs to return to the island of Kutubdia, 50 miles away, where his family home has been swallowed by ever-rising tides and is now out at sea under several feet of water.

To make matters worse, the local government, which welcomed him when he arrived three years ago, wants him and thousands of other families who have fled to the coast from the island, to make way for an airport and hotel developments.

Kutubdia is one of many islands off Bangladesh and India affected by increasingly rapid erosion and some of the fastest recorded sea-level rises in the world. These "vanishing islands" are shrinking dramatically. Kutubdia has halved in size in 20 years, to around 100 sq km. Since 1991, six villages on the island of fishermen and saltworkers have been swamped and about 40,000 people have fled. Like Hashem, most have relocated to the coast near Cox's Bazar.

Cloud Grey

NOAA: Coastal effects of climate change threaten 50 percent of Americans

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© Shutterstock
Land that roughly 50 percent of Americans call home is under threat from the coastal effects of climate change, a study published Tuesday (PDF) by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) warns.

"An increase in the intensity of extreme weather events such as storms like Sandy and Katrina, coupled with sea-level rise and the effects of increased human development along the coasts, could affect the sustainability of many existing coastal communities and natural resources," report co-author Virginia Burkett, of the U.S. Geological Survey, said in an advisory.

The study warns that approximately 50 percent of Americans live in coastal watershed communities - a number that is projected to grow - that face increasing flood risks due to storm surges, extreme weather and rising sea levels as the climate grows more unpredictable. These risks are compounded by changes to coastal ecosystems brought about by human activity, causing "toxic algal blooms" and depleted fish stocks, loss of wetlands and dying coral reefs.

Question

Canada: Dozens of dead seals found on P.E.I. beach

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Fisheries officers have sent samples of the dead animals to a wildlife pathologist at the Atlantic Veterinary College
The Department of Fisheries and Oceans is investigating after dozens of dead seals were found on a beach and in the waters off Prince Edward Island.

A group of students from the Charlottetown-based Atlantic Veterinary College found as many as 50 dead seals over the weekend.

The students came upon the bloody carcasses of grey seals either dead or dying. Many of seals were pups.


Igloo

Heavy snowfall closes dozens of roads in Turkey

Snow in Turkey
© aabadoluajansi
Meric-Ipsala road in the Thrace region of Turkey has been shut down to motor vehicle traffic on Sunday due to heavy snowfall which began in Edirne province.

Aside from the Meric-Ipsala road, 37 village roads have also been shut down to traffic due to heavy snowfall in the region.

Road crews are working to open the Meric-Ipsala road to traffic again on Sunday.

Snow thickness at Uludag, one of the favorite skiing centers of Europe, reached 215 centimeters on Sunday.

The Weather Department of the north-western province of Bursa said that they expected snowfall at Uludag on both Sunday and Monday.

Battery

Underground explosion in Nebraska leads to pillars of fire bursting from manholes

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© reddit user djtacoman
An underground electrical equipment fire caused a power outage in parts of downtown Omaha Sunday night. As of 10:30 a.m. Monday, OPPD reported less than 100 customers in the area were still without power.

The outage stretches from 11th Street to just west of 20th, from Leavenworth to Farnam. OPPD said it plans to have power restored by sometime Monday evening.

Due to the outage, the Douglas County Courthouse will be closed Monday. Those who are scheduled to appear in court are being sent next door to the Douglas County City building. The MUD building at 17th and Harney is closed until further notice.


  • Evil Rays

    England: Bad weather to blame for dead starfish washed up in Cleethorpes area

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    Thousands of starfish have been washed up on the beach following the recent bad weather.

    About 4,000 of them laid strewn for miles at the Humberston Fitties yesterday, turning the beach into a marine life graveyard.

    It is thought they were swept onto the sands following storms out in the North Sea and the sub-zero temperatures.

    Rachael Shaw, of the Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust, said: "It's possible that bad weather or storms out at sea, perhaps associated with high tides, have caused the mass stranding of these starfish."


    Cloud Precipitation

    Storms whip up ocean foam on Australia coast

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    Ocean foam whipped up by wild seas has blanketed beaches on the Gold and Sunshine coasts.

    Gold Coast holiday-maker Lionel Armitstead says the white froth has come up the foreshore at Burleigh Heads and is covering pedestrian paths and picnic areas.

    In some places the suds are up to one metre high.

    'It's like a snowstorm,' he told AAP.

    'The kids are up to their shoulders basically ... I've never seen anything like it.'


    Bizarro Earth

    Earthquake Magnitude 6.0 - SE of Kegen, Kazakhstan

    Kazak Quake_280113
    © USGS
    Event Time
    2013-01-28 16:38:53 UTC
    2013-01-28 22:38:53 UTC+06:00 at epicenter

    Location
    42.604°N 79.696°E depth=10.9km (6.8mi)

    Nearby Cities
    60km (37mi) SE of Kegen, Kazakhstan
    107km (66mi) E of Karakol, Kyrgyzstan
    109km (68mi) E of Tyup, Kyrgyzstan
    142km (88mi) ENE of Kyzyl-Suu, Kyrgyzstan
    419km (260mi) E of Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan

    Technical Details