Earth Changes
Sunday, September 26, 2010 at 12:12:38 UTC
Sunday, September 26, 2010 at 09:12:38 PM at epicenter
Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones
Location:
5.314°S, 133.933°E
Depth:
8.7 km (5.4 miles)
Region:
KEPULAUAN KAI, INDONESIA
Distances:
60 km (35 miles) NNW of Dobo, Kepulauan Aru, Indonesia
310 km (195 miles) WSW of Enarotali, Papua, Indonesia
855 km (530 miles) NNE of DARWIN, Northern Territory, Australia
3000 km (1860 miles) E of JAKARTA, Java, Indonesia

The attack took place on Tuesday between Dyer Island and Pearly Beach, east of Cape Town.
Khanyisile Momoza, 29, was attacked as he harvested valuable perlemoen shells in the waters near Gansbaai in South Africa.
The fisherman was among a group of 12 poachers who had tried to swim to safety after spotting the shark in shallow waters.
A friend of Mr Momoza, who witnessed the attack, said: "There was screaming and crying. We just swam, we didn't look back.
"We were swimming in a group but he was a bit behind us.
"It jumped out of the water with him and then it took him down."
"More importantly, there have been times when sea-ice cover was less extensive than at the end of the 20th century."
The seismic crisis was associated with significant inflation (3 cm) of the volcano, especially near the summit. The data indicates that magma has moved towards the surface and an eruption is imminent.
Access trails to the summit of Piton de la Fournaise, either from Pas de Bellecombe or from any other trails have been closed to the public from 24th September 2010 until further notice.

Portable shrine-carriers battle in the ocean during the "Shiofumi" event of the "Ohara Hadaka Matsuri," three hours before the lightning strike in Isumi.
The lightning strike occurred at around 6 p.m. at Ohara Elementary School during the "Ohara Hadaka Matsuri" (Ohara naked man festival), hitting 32 males and two females carrying portable shrines. A 65-year-old man and a 13-year-old boy were seriously injured.
The festival's executive committee told a news conference that the event's 18 portable shrines had been gathered onto the school grounds, and just as the festival was about to finish its climactic farewell ceremony, lightning directly struck two portable shrines that had been raised high into the air.
The injured were moved to the school's gymnasium and those requiring medical attention were sent to a hospital.

An earthquake survivor tries to set up her tent after it fell down due to heavy rain in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Friday, Sept. 24, 2010.
Three adults and two children were killed in the tarp, tent and shack camps that still dominate Port-au-Prince more than eight months after the Jan. 12 earthquake, civil protection head Marie Alta Jean-Baptiste told The Associated Press. Several more were injured.
"We are investigating to see how many tents and camps were damaged," Jean-Baptiste said.
The storm passed through the mountain-ringed bowl of the Haitian capital, exposing rubble-filled neighborhoods to wind and rain at levels far below a sustained tropical storm. But that was enough to provoke panic and chaos, especially in encampments still home to more than 1.3 million people.
Madison -- Gov. Jim Doyle declared a state of emergency in Buffalo, Jackson, Marathon, Portage and Wood counties on Friday following strong storms that caused flooding in the area.
Seven counties are currently under a state of emergency. Doyle announced a state of emergency in Clark and Trempealeau counties on Thursday.
According to state officials, Wisconsin's Emergency Management and Department of Natural Resources officials are working with the National Guard to assist in recovery efforts.
State officials say the declaration is a response to widespread flooding and storm damage in the affected counties. The storms caused damage to homes and businesses, flooding roads and bringing down power lines.
In Clark County, officials have reported at least three bridges washed away and damage estimates nearing $500,000.

Cold Oceans: Some skeptics say breaks in a warming trend of the 21st century cast doubt on findings by the U.N. panel of climate scientists that climate change is man-made.
Many experts had previously explained a slight global cooling around 1970 as a side-effect of a slow build-up of sun-dimming air pollution from factories, power plants and cars that cleared up in later years with stricter air pollution laws.
But scientists in the United States and Britain said an examination of temperature records revealed "a rapid drop in Northern Hemisphere sea surface temperatures of about 0.3 degree Celsius (0.5 F) between about 1968 and 1972."
The cooling was most in the North Atlantic. Reasons for the chill were unclear but it coincided with a sudden inflow of cold water from the Arctic.
One year ago Thursday, the temperature soared to just over a blistering hot 30 C.
On the same day this year, meteorologists are forecasting a high of 5 C and a chance of snow.
Summer officially ends with the fall equinox Sept. 22, but for most Calgarians, summer never arrived at all.
"This is the worst summer I've seen," said Ronell Toledo, who moved to the city from the Philippines in 2004.
"Compared to other years, this year it's been damp and wet."
The poor weather didn't stop Toledo from heading out on the bicycle pathways between Rundle and Ogden with two buddies and their mountain bikes Monday.
The hills around Badrinath and Kedarnath temples have received snowfall while lower areas received rainfall forcing the people to take out their woollens.
Usually, the Garhwal Himalayas experience snowfall during October.









