Earth Changes
Dr Chris DaSilva from Animal Clinic Maffra was recently called to help with a difficult calving in a healthy cow in the Winnindoo area.
The cow hadn't been due to calve for another two months, and when he examined her he discovered the abnormality.
Sadly, the calf was deceased.
Fellow Animal Clinic Maffra vet Dr Mark Neilan said although the condition was not common, vets usually delivered at least one two-headed calf annually.
Venkateswara Rao, the owner of the buffalo is a farmer in the Rudravaram village of Redikuda Zone. The family later informed the officials of the veterinary department.
Reportedly, the veterinarians came to visit and have been experimenting and researching why this calf was born with two-heads.
The small team, who work during low tides, left very early on the morning of June 7 to explore somewhere new. For several months, the beach walks have been streamed and made virtual as a part of Harbor Wildwatch's online offerings in light of COVID-19. Met with a perfect weather day, the group spent more than five hours exploring the area in and around Tongue Point, checking out marine animals and taping vignettes for their Facebook and Insta pages.
As the day was winding down, exhausted and ready for the drive back to headquarters, paddleboarder Scott Herning called out to the group, "Are you biologists?" after coming upon a very large dead creature with a huge eye. Rachel Easton, biologist and education director at Harbor WildWatch, described the experience as a biologist's dream come true: "No matter how tired we were, that's definitely something we want to see!"
The fish found on June 7 measured 53 inches in length, but the species is known to grow to 6 ½ feet long and stays primarily in deep ocean areas. Only five have been recorded as washing up on the shore between British Columbia and Washington.
Fishermen from Cozumel, Quintana Roo, encountered a rare, six-meter-long oarfish this week.
In a video posted to Facebook, the fishermen filmed the bizarre-looking fish they found swimming close to the surface before they gaffed it and brought it on board. It appeared to have suffered a bite wound, the fishermen said, suggesting that was the reason it had left deep water.
According to the Florida Museum of Natural History, the oarfish, whose scientific name is Regalecus glesne, can grow to 10 meters long, and weigh up to 270 kilos. It is the longest bony fish in the world.
Comment: Read in addition: Creatures from the deep signal major Earth Changes: Is anyone paying attention?
The tiny Otago town of Middlemarch was far from the middle of March on Sunday morning, registering the bone-chilling -12.3 degrees Celsius.
According to Niwa, that marks the country's coldest June temperature since 2015, while it was Middlemarch's lowest since 2001.
The second-coldest spot - the -9.9C a couple of hours west in Clyde - was that town's chilliest since 1978.
MetService, meanwhile, have weather stations in different areas to Niwa, and had Pukaki Airport at -9C, Alexandra Airport at -8.6C, Dunedin Airport at -7.8C, Mt Cook Airport at -6.5C and Christchurch Airport at -5.5C.
It was a second successive shivery night, as a cold front moved slowly up the country, bringing clear skies, light winds, but chilly overnight air temperatures.
A giant squid recently washed up on Britannia Bay Beach in the Western Cape. After videos of the squid were shared rapidly on social media, various news reports about the giant squid started to appear.
It's reported that the squid was still alive when it was found, and can be seen moving slightly at various points in the videos shared by Maroela Media, but according to reports, those who found the squid were unfortunately unable to roll the squid back into the water. Richard Davies, who made the discovery on Sunday, 7 June, estimated that this giant squid weighed between 200 and 300 kilograms, and was measured to be 4,19 metres in length.
Comment: For a broader overview concerning these types of events with their troubling associated implications, see: Creatures from the deep signal major Earth Changes: Is anyone paying attention?
An earthquake with a 5.7 magnitude shook Bingol province in eastern Turkey on Sunday, killing one and injuring 18 people and causing the collapse of a military observation tower, officials said.
Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu said that 18 people were injured and one security guard died in the earthquake that struck eastern Karliova district at 1424 GMT.
Some 10 homes have been partially damaged in Elmali and Dinarbey villages of Yedisu district, said Bingol Governor Kadir Ekinci.
National Weather Service grabbed this photo from their mountain cam, showing low visibility and piles of snow—in mid-June!
Ahhhh.... January in the Cascades. Scratch that. Turns out that summer is less than a week away. Who knew? 🤷 #wawx pic.twitter.com/9zM81Bf2pB
— NWS Seattle (@NWSSeattle) June 14, 2020
Environment Canada issued a special weather statement for the highway between Merritt and Kelowna warning that 2 to 5 cm of snow could fall Sunday morning.
Meteorologist Colin Tam said having snow on the Okanagan Connector at this time of year is not an annual occurrence but isn't unheard of.















Comment: Also pertinent: Creatures from the deep signal major Earth Changes: Is anyone paying attention?