Earth Changes
According to the Bradford County Coroner, lighting hit a total of 4 people around 2 o'clock. The two people who survived were taken to Robert Packer Hospital, and the two that were killed have yet to be positively identified.
Coroner Thomas Carman said it appears that the two males who were killed do not appear to be from the area, and are believed to be from Southern Pennsylvania.
Carman said that all four people that were struck by lightning were under a large tree stand in an open field.
There's no word on the condition of the two people who were taken to the hospital.
"I was just getting ready for dinner when one of my friends, Alex, cried 'NLC party time!'," says Veres. "The electric-blue clouds were almost directly overhead. I sprinted to the car (partially dressing in the street) and drove up Gellért Hill for a view of the clouds over the most famous sights of Budapest--the Danube River, Chain Bridge, Buda Castle, and Parliament. And, yes, my dinner got cold."
Paris was also "overcast" by noctilucent clouds. "They were very bright," reports Bertrand Kulik, who shot them floating above the Eiffel Tower:
The monster earthquake hit at 9.54am AEST on Tuesday and has been felt as far as 800 kilometres south east in Bali.
The earthquake hit around 93.8 kilometers north of Batang, a coastal town in Central Java province, The U.S. Geological Survey reported.
The Bureau of Meteorology said there is no threat of a tsunami and no injuries have been reported.
The epicentre was measured at a depth of 528 kilometres after the earthquake hit.
One person shared on social media they felt their apartment shaking in Ubud for around two minutes.
Slippery roads and as much as 30 centimeters of snow in the mountains prompted warnings from state highway officials that motorists shouldn't drive over mountain passes without snow tires on their vehicles. One mountain lodge, Sognefjellshytta, reported a new record low temperature for July of minus-7.2C late Saturday night, and so did several other weather stations in the mountains of Southern Norway.
Comment: Also recently: Big July snowstorm at ski resort in southern Norway - at least 14 inches dumped

LONG WAY FROM HOME: The carcass of a young leopard seal was found on the beach at Cape Recife in Port Elizabeth recently
According to Bayworld marine mammals curator Greg Hofmeyr, the sighting was very rare.
Hofmeyr said leopard seals were normally found in the pack ice around the Antarctic, which is about 4,000km away.
Hofmeyr said: "We really don't know what would bring a leopard seal this far but it is possible that young animals such as this one could get lost and swim out of their range.
The woman was trimming plants near the edge of the gated community's pond when the gator latched onto her leg and pulled her into the water, S.C. Department of Natural Resources spokesman David Lucas said Sunday.
A man passing by on a golf cart was unaware a gator was involved but saw the woman in obvious distress in the pond.
"He ran to the pond and jumped in," Lucas said. "He got his arms around her and pulled. He felt resistance at first but thought that was her weight."
Sukrien Yusoff, 24, is believed to be the latest victim of crocodile attacks, bringing the number of casualties to seven across the state this year.
His body was found at around 11.05am by villagers about 2kms downstream from where he was attacked by a crocodile at about 1.45pm on Friday.
The latest crocodile attack occurred at Kg Kalabakan in Tawau.
The Sunshine Coast man had been swimming in waters off Indian Head, on the island's north-east, when the attack occurred.
Paramedics and an RACQ LifeFlight rescue helicopter rushed to the site just after 2pm on Saturday.
An off-duty doctor and nurse gave the man first aid after he made it to the nearby rocky shore at the base of the large headland.

Perth photographer Steve Yanev's shot of lightning over Scarborough, titled 'Glorious Nature at its Best'.
Steve Yanev saw the impending storm and wasted no time grabbing his camera and heading for the coast.
The Perth photographer and avid thunderstorm chaser eyed the Scarborough car park as the best vantage point and wasn't disappointed.
"There were many lightning strikes but it took an hour so to capture this shot," he said.
"I particularly like the lightning rods breaking through the clouds and others being seemingly cut in half by parts of the clouds. Beautiful and powerful."
The end result was a photo Yanev decided to title 'Glorious Nature at its Best' - a vista of dark skies over a churning ocean, eerily illuminated by arcs of lightning streaking down from the clouds while Scarborough's foreshore looms in the foreground.













Comment: Anomalous heatwave in Russian arctic continues with outbreaks of wildfires