Earth Changes
Monday, July 11, 2011 at 20:47:06 UTC
Tuesday, July 12, 2011 at 04:47:06 AM at epicenter
Location
9.535°N, 122.175°E
Depth
19 km (11.8 miles)
Region
NEGROS, PHILIPPINES
Distances
125 km (78 miles) W (280°) from Dumaguete, Negros, Philippines
134 km (83 miles) SSW (198°) from Iloilo, Panay, Philippines
150 km (93 miles) SW (215°) from Bacolod, Negros, Philippines
580 km (360 miles) SSE (167°) from MANILA, Philippines
A derecho (from the Spanish adverb for "straight") is a long-lived windstorm that forms in a straight line - unlike the swirling winds of a tornado - and is associated with what's known as a bow echo, a line of severe thunderstorms. The term "derecho" was first used over a century ago to describe a storm in Iowa. Across the United States, there are generally one to three derecho events each year.
The Midwest derecho has wind gusts between 60 and 80 mph (97 to 129 kph), according to the Weather Channel. Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan and Illinois have all reported severe winds. These severe winds are the main cause of damage from the storm, said Rose Sengenberger, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Romeoville, Ill., but added that people should be on the lookout for other dangerous weather.
"With any long-lived storm, there is also the threat of lightning and heavy rain," Sengenberger told OurAmazingPlanet.
Disaster managment official Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said Monday people living close to Mount Lokon in north Sulawesi province should be prepared to evacuate if necessary.
Locals and tourists have been urged to stay up to 2.2 miles (3.5 kilometers) away from the 5,741-foot (1,750-meter) volcano.
Catania airport on the east coast of the island of Sicily was not expected to re-open before Sunday morning while the runway was cleared, the report said.
The volcano, which currently does not present any risk to local residents, spewed lava on to its southeastern slopes on Saturday afternoon and winds carried the ash further afield.
Etna is the highest active volcano in Europe at 3,295 metres (10,810 feet). The last eruption was in May.
A massive flood of meltwater from Iceland's Myrdalsjoekull glacier, meanwhile, has raised fears of an eruption from the powerful Katla volcano there.
But after floodwater from last Sunday's storm seeped into the basement and soaked those boxes, he doesn't know how much can be saved.
"We're trying everything because you can't get those words back. All of his love letters, clothes, cards, things like that, because I saved everything he ever gave me," Gavin's mother, Georgeann Ayers, said.
Most of the sweaters are wool, and she is doubtful they will survive. Pictures, old report cards, school projects and baby items that the newest addition to the family, 1-month-old Gabe, would have used, were destroyed by the water. The family moved in less than a year ago and most of their belongings were still in boxes in the basement.
A week after a storm dumped at least a half foot of rain in the area, officials are still struggling to get a handle on the total amount of families - at least 300 - and total cost of the damages - several million dollars and climbing.
The researchers report finding evidence of many small past quakes that have ruptured along small "step-over" faults, which run at right angles to the fault's southern end. The underground stresses those small quakes have built up could trigger a much bigger one on the dominant San Andreas, they say.
A report from a group at the U.S. Geological Survey in Woods Hole, Mass., the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in San Diego, and the Nevada Seismological Laboratory in Reno suggests that a major temblor in the Salton Sea region could reach a magnitude greater than 7 - significantly larger than the 6.9-magnitude Loma Prieta quake of 1989 in the Bay Area.
The scientists' report is published online in the current issue of the journal Nature Geoscience.
"This morning I witnessed a spectacular display of NLCs--the best I've ever seen," reports photographer Marek Nikodem of Szubin, Poland. "The clouds were more than 180 degrees wide and 100 degrees high. It was a fantastic show."
July 2011 has been a banner month for these mysterious clouds. Normally confined to polar latitudes, NLCs have been sighted in recent nights as far south as France in Europe and Kansas and Colorado in the United States. Sky watchers at all latitudes are encouraged to be alert for electric blue; observing tips may be found in the 2011 NLC photo gallery.
In Uttarakhand, five persons were washed away in flash flood in Nainital district, while two children, including a girl, were killed in Azamgarh (Uttar Pradesh) after being hit by lightning in separate incidents.
Heavy showers resulted in traffic snarls, water logging and power outages at several places. High humidity was recorded across the region with the Met predicting more rains in the days to come.
The 211 call center is a clearinghouse for community service information for people in Nebraska and southwest Iowa.
Overall call volume for June was up 77 percent from last year because of all the flood calls, said Kathy O'Hara, a United Way spokeswoman.
From June 1 to July 5, the call center received 2,656 flood-related calls. Almost 60 percent of those calls - 1,558 - came from Pottawattamie County.
Other metro-area counties also logged plenty of flood-related calls: In Nebraska, there were 482 in Douglas County, 138 in Sarpy and 25 in Washington; in Iowa, 82 in Mills, 47 in Harrison and 39 in Fremont.
The Iowa Concern Hotline also has received a number of flood-related calls, said coordinator Margaret Van Ginkel.
According to sources heavy monsoon showers were received in several districts of Balochistan including provincial capital Quetta, Zhob, Barkhan, Loralai, Musa Khel and others.
In Barkhan streams flooded due to heavy rainfall, swept away a vehicle resultantly two women including mother and a daughter were drowned. The locals and relatives on self assistance basis recovered the bodies of both.













