Earth Changes
The strong 7.8 magnitude earthquake that shook Ecuador on April 16, 2016 had another powerful consequence in San Isidro.
Large cracks and holes have already swallowed more than 150 hectares of fields and destroyed an entire farm with about 70 heads of cattle, and chickens and some houses threatening farmers' lifes.
The main event occurred suddenly in a loud boom.
Farmer Gonzalo was at home with his wife his daughter, 5 years, and his nephew when the the house started falling apart.
Then, outside, they were surrounded by holes and cracks.
They were able to save about 20 calves and cows from the armageddon.
News 5 WCYB checked with the Sullivan County Sheriff's Office, and they told us they also received several calls.
Most of the callers were along Highway 126 between Blountville and Bristol.
Officers and firefighters have been checking the area, but so far they have not determined what caused it.
The colors are caused by sunlight passing through ice crystals that look like a hexagonal plate. The crystal refracts the sunlight, like a prism, and separates the light into colors that we can see (ROYGBIV). The ice crystals need to be horizontally oriented to allow the sunlight to enter the side of the crystal, get refracted inside the plate, then exit the bottom of the crystal.
The reason we can now see these circumhorizontal arcs is because the sun has to be higher than 58 degrees above the horizon. You may find such arcs usually during the midday hours.
The halo actually extends 360 degrees around the sky, however, it is only visible when the refracted light is reflected off of clouds.
A bystander took photos of the black car stopped on Mission and New Montgomery streets at about 6 p.m.
The front driver's side wheel of the vehicle, a black Chevrolet, was in the hole in the middle of the road.
Traffic had come to a standstill and emergency crews were on the scene. Muni buses were stopped at the intersection.
A crowd of pedestrians gathered around the intersection, many heading home on their evening commutes.
The lightning claimed the lives of K Someswara Rao (9) and his brother K Praveen Kumar (5) when they were playing outside their house in Billaput area under Dumbriguda mandal in the Agency area of Visakhapatnam.
Sub-inspector of Dumbriguda police station B Ramakrishna said bodies would be sent for autopsy.
Two shepherds were killed in lightning strike in Jeegiram area under Saluru police station limits in Vizianagaram district early morning. They were identified as A China Sambayya (60) and M Siva (25).
The two were grazing the sheep in a field. The incident came to light after the sheep returned home without the owners.
Sub-Inspector of Salur police station, AS Rao, said bodies were handed over to the relatives following the autopsy.
Source: Press Trust of India
Rain and thunderstorms occurred in the capital and elsewhere on Thursday after a week of heat wave that has been scorching the country.
Five persons were killed in Sirajganj and Rajshahi each, and four in Pabna, Kishoreganj and Brahmanbarhia each in the afternoon, local officials and police said.
Around the same time, Dhaka, Gazipur, Bogra and Natore had two casualties each, and Habiganj, Naogaon and Niphamari had one death each.
The now-defunct SAARC Meteorological Research Centre's former director Sujit Kumar Deb Sharma told bdnews24.com that it was natural for thunderstorms to occur in this season of Nor'westers.
They generally occur between March and May and sometimes between October and November after the rainy season too, he said, adding that lightning during such storms kills 200-300 people on average each year in Bangladesh.
As many as four humpbacks at a time have been spotted flapping their tails and breaching in bay waters, apparently feeding on anchovies and other schooling fish during incoming tides.

Nobody lives near Mount Sourabaya, but a NASA satellite captured its eruption in the South Atlantic in this false-color image.
Instead, satellites captured images of the eruptions, which happened on April 24 and May 1, 2016, NASA reported.
Volcanic eruptions in far-flung places, such as the South Atlantic, used to go unnoticed. But the advent of satellites and seismic monitoring has given scientists new insight into volcanic events worldwide, NASA officials said.
"Today, scientists can pick up signatures of events occurring far from any human observers," NASA's Earth Observatory said in a statement.
That's exactly what happened when Mount Sourabaya erupted. The volcano sits on Bristol Island, one of the largest islands in the South Sandwich Islands chain. The archipelago is located about 1,725 miles (2,776 kilometers) southeast of Buenos Aires, Argentina, which is about the distance from Los Angeles to Chicago.
Launched at the end of 2013, Swarm is measuring and untangling the different magnetic signals from Earth's core, mantle, crust, oceans, ionosphere and magnetosphere - an undertaking that will take several years to complete.
Although invisible, the magnetic field and electric currents in and around Earth generate complex forces that have immeasurable effects on our everyday lives.
The field can be thought of as a huge bubble, protecting us from cosmic radiation and electrically charged atomic particles that bombard Earth in solar winds. However, it is in a permanent state of flux.
Presented at this week's Living Planet Symposium, new results from the constellation of Swarm satellites show where our protective field is weakening and strengthening, and importantly how fast these changes are taking place.
The animation above shows the strength of Earth's magnetic field and how it changed between 1999 and May 2016.
Blue depicts where the field is weak and red shows regions where it is strong. As well as recent data from the Swarm constellation, information from the CHAMP and Ørsted satellites were also used to create the map.
It shows clearly that the field has weakened by about 3.5% at high latitudes over North America, while it has strengthened about 2% over Asia. The region where the field is at its weakest - the South Atlantic Anomaly - has moved steadily westward and weakened further by about 2%.
In addition, the magnetic north pole is wandering east, towards Asia.
According to WESH-TV, JetBlue Flight 1134 was en route from San Juan, Puerto Rico, to Orlando, Florida, when the plane began to shake violently as attendants served snacks and beverages to the passengers.
One of the people onboard, Veronica Hernandez Torres, stated that the plane took a sudden dive, sending passengers without their seatbelts on into the air. Several people onboard reportedly struck their heads on the ceiling of the aircraft.
Once the turbulence was over, crew members found a doctor onboard who examined passengers with injuries, including a woman and a child who suffered cuts and abrasions as a result of the incident.
The flight crew considered making an emergency landing in the Bahamas, but the doctor onboard treated the victims and cleared them to continue the flight to Orlando. The JetBlue flight landed safely just before 9 p.m. local time, and emergency crews were waiting to assist the injured passengers.
Comment: Some other incidents of severe turbulence injuring passengers during flights in the past couple of weeks include:
- 17 passengers hurt as Hong Kong bound flight hit by severe air turbulence over Borneo
- 7 injured by air turbulence on flight from Dominican Republic
- 'Severe and unexpected' turbulence injures 32 on Etihad flight to Indonesia














Comment: Some other signs of earth 'opening up' in recent times include: