Earth Changes
A dead fin whale has become an attraction on a beach just north of the northern Jutland holiday town of Blokhus.
The stranded 18.5 metre-long fin whale washed up on the beach on Tuesday morning and was later pulled further ashore using a front-end loader.
Anders Østerby from the North Sea Oceanarium in Hirtshals was one of the visitors.
"It looks emaciated, so it could have died due to a shortage of food or disease," Østerby told Jyllands-Posten.
The waterspouts were spotted moving northwards over the lake situated between New Orleans and Mandeville on Tuesday afternoon.
The quake is the biggest earthquake in California in more than a year, according to the USGS. Lucy Jones, a USGS seismologist, told KPCC that Tuesday's earthquake is the biggest shake the state has had since 2014's 5.1 in La Habra and the 6.0 Napa earthquake. There was also a 5.7 earthquake offshore in January 2015, and a 4.8 that came close just a week ago (it was a 4.77, while this was a 4.84).
"All of California is earthquake country, this is a relatively less common site down under the basin — but we have seen earthquakes here before," Jones said.
The earthquake was reportedly 13 miles deep, which is why it was felt as far away as the Los Angeles area, Jones said. According to KPCC's earthquake tracker, 280 people have reported they felt the quake.
There were no injuries or damages reported, Kern County Fire Department spokesperson James Dowell told KPCC.
A map from the USGS shows locations of where people felt the shake, and how big of an impact the shake had.
To tell USGS what you felt, fill out the "Did you feel it" report on the agency's website.

Tyler's face was covered in blood. A family friend said he was bitten by a snake as he slept.
The boy, Tyler, was sleeping in the top bunk in his bedroom at his family home near Macksville, on the NSW Mid North Coast, on Friday night when the snake bit him several times on his face and hand.
Tyler's mother, Tamara, told the Guardian News she ran into the room and ripped the snake off his body.
"It was like a nightmare," the Nambucca Heads newspaper reported Tamara as saying.
"It was a terrifying scream and I didn't know what had happened - I certainly didn't think it involved a snake.
"I have no idea how it even got into the house."
When Tamara entered the bedroom she said the snake was wrapped around her son's belly.
"I tried to pull Tyler from the bed but he didn't come with me ... I had to roll him, then pull," she said.
"I saw his face and the blood and his eyes were still closed so I don't think he was fully awake.
"I tried to check him over but he wouldn't let me touch him anywhere."
Within five minutes Tamara's cousins arrived at the property and "dealt with the snake" while Tamara drove her son to Macksville District Hospital.
"Tyler doesn't remember anything - which is the best part," Tamara said.
"He was only complaining about his finger hurting. He tapped his head on the way to hospital and he asked me why he was bleeding.
"He wouldn't know that a snake had bitten him if we hadn't told him or if people hadn't been talking about it."
A family friend, Craig Baker, posted an image of Tyler's bloodied face on Facebook, with another photograph, of her cousin Brady, holding up the snake. Brady is seen holding the snake above his head - but it is so long it drapes on the ground at his feet and is curled around his hand.
Mr Baker wrote that the python bit Tyler several times on his face and hand, before Tamara heard his screams and ran to his aid.
"Tammy ... had to pull the snake off him," Mr Baker said.
When contacted, a spokeswoman for the Mid North Coast Local Health District said a six-year-old boy was taken to Macksville District Hospital just after midnight on February 19. The child was transferred to Coffs Harbour Hospital, and was released later that morning.
Mr Baker said Tyler was "fine" following the bite.
One death was reported in Lamar County, Miss., according to the Clarion-Ledger in Jackson.
Lamar County Coroner Cody Creel confirmed one fatality in Lamar County as a result of the storms that passed through.
Two more deaths were were reported in southern Louisiana after a tornado hit an RV park in Convent, according to Fox 8 New Orleans.
Several RVs were overturned and emergency workers were trying to reach victims, the news organization reported.
Word of the deaths came amid at least 15 reports of tornadoes in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama that were recorded by the Storm Prediction Center as of 8 p.m. Tuesday.
YouTube posts since 2011 have captured mysterious noises, some seeming to come from the sky. Reports of eerie trumpet sounds have been posted from around the world, including the Philippines, Australia, Germany, Russia and the United States.
Snopes.com reports that the US Geological Survey experts note that unusual sounds can be attributed to deep earthquakes and waves crashing into distant cliffs. While the sounds are expected to have an earthly origin, some scientist say atmospheric noise can also be caused by meteor flashes and acoustic gravity waves.
Click below to hear a sound recorded at Riverview Park in Nebraska City Sunday night. It is 1 minute and 50 seconds long. There is a train whistle at 45 seconds, otherwise it is just the trumpet blast.

Nicaragua’s Momotombo Volcano continues to erupt after a century of inactivity, on Sunday, Feb. 21, 2016.
Volcano experts from the US, UK, Costa Rica and local geologists are observing activity at four active peaks in Nicaragua after the flurry of explosions.
The biggest, and most active, is the enormous 1,297-metre Momotombo stratovolcano, near the city of León.
Momotombo, on the north of Lake Managua 25 miles from Nicaragua's capital Managua, blew for the first time in 110 years in December, and has been active ever since.
In a post about the situation Costa Rican English-speaking news site The Tico Times wrote it had sent "geologists and local townspeople into a tizzy"
The earthquake, which struck at about 5:08 a.m. Sydney time on Wednesday, was centered about 454 kilometers (282 miles) northeast of the French scientific station Dumont d'Urville in Antarctica, or about 2,261 kilometers (1,405 miles) south of Hobart on Tasmania.
The earthquake struck at a depth of about 7.7 kilometers (4.8 miles) below the seabed, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) reported. The earthquake was not strong enough to generate a tsunami, and no alerts were issued by the Joint Australian Tsunami Warning Centre.
No damage or casualties were expected from Wednesday's earthquake.
Whether it's ice stacking on Lake Superior in the US, car-shaped icicles in Canada, or floating blocks on Lake Baikal in Russia, mother nature has put on quite a show this season.
Lake Superior, USA
As sheets of ice crashed on the shore of the great Lake Superior in Duluth, Minnesota, they stack up like broken glass, creating a beautiful and somewhat hypnotic scene.
Lake Baikal, Siberia
With temperatures dipping to -19 degrees Celsius (-3 Fahrenheit) and strong winds, a block of ice can be seen floating across the frozen lake as though it's just off to meet another block further along.

A remote Fijian village is photographed from the air during a surveillance flight conducted by the New Zealand Defence Force on February 21, 2016
The footage posted on the Fijiian government website shows a massive scale of destruction on the small island - whole villages have been flooded amid Winston's destructive winds, which reportedly reached about 325 kph.
"The images emerging from early aerial assessments of affected areas are truly heartbreaking, leaving little doubt about the ferocity of this cyclone," said Osnat Lubrani, UN Resident Coordinator in Fiji.
Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama said that the recovery process will take "a long time."
"Almost no part of our nation has been left unscarred. And many of our rural and maritime areas bore the brunt of Winston's fury," he said.
Aid agencies said that Fiji now may face outbreaks of the Zika and Dengue viruses, both of which are caused by infected mosquitoes.
"The threat of dengue and Zika in the coming days in Fiji is real," said Chris Hagarty, senior health program manager at Plan International Australia. "The period immediately following a disaster of this scale can be a particularly dangerous one."
According to the UN, more than 8,100 people "are currently sheltering in evacuation centers" and 150 houses have been destroyed in the storm.















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