Earth Changes
The incident happened at about 10.30am this morning at Tantabiddi Beach in the Ningaloo Marine Park.
Is it believed the woman received non-threatening injuries after being bitten by an unknown species of shark.
St John Ambulance did not attend, but she was taken to Exmouth Medical Centre for treatment.
But decreased solar activity does not account for all that is going on. The Sun is quiet, yes, yet the planet is being super-charged. So whatever is 'grounding' the Sun has set powerful currents running through Earth. The Sun actually unleashed its solar flare since 2017 on May 29. Something that can get more dangerous for satellites and power grids if our magnetosphere continues to weaken.
Funnily enough, the eruption of intense rioting in the USA over the killing of George Floyd coincided with this solar flare... a human-cosmic connection?
Also last month, swathes of the northern hemisphere returned to winter conditions - just one month out from summer, and despite a record-warm in much of Europe, Russia and Northern America. In the southern hemisphere, meanwhile, early snow and cold records were broken despite winter having not yet 'officially' begun.
Absurd volumes of water continue falling out of the sky the world over, with devastating flash-floods and landslides hitting Kenya, India, Oman and Central America last month - hundreds of people were killed and thousands displaced.
India, Pakistan and East Africa suffered their worst locust plagues in decades, causing major crop failures, which, combined with the unnecessary food losses caused by the lockdown, suggests we might be looking at serious food shortages in the near-future.
Atmospheric electrical activity continues to amaze - and kill lots of people and animals, unfortunately. Last month, Washington DC alone registered over 87,000 lightning strikes in a single day... that is nearly 23 times its annual average!
All that and more in our SOTT Earth Changes Summary for May 2020:
Watch it also on Sott.net's Vimeo channel:

A landslide destroyed a road in northern Norway
The shocking images and video of Wednesday's landslide in northern Norway made headlines around the world. Eight houses were taken into the sea by the powerful landslide measuring 650 metres wide, a few miles west of Alta. Thankfully, no-one was killed or injured.
A second landslide
Now, the nearby road has collapsed in a second significant movement of the earth. Local police said the landslide was "significant". It is estimated at 30-40 metres high and about 50 metres in diameter.
There was no traffic on the road, the old E6, as it has been closed since Wednesday's landslide. However, the police confirmed that no houses, buildings or people were involved in this latest landslide.
Nevertheless, the images will cause concern for those living nearby or in other vulnerable areas across northern Norway.
Fire services in Olomouc Region said that, during the evening of 07 June, teams rescued and evacuated dozens of people from flooding in several villages in the area, including Šumvald, Dolní Sukolom, Břevenec and Oskava.
Local media said the flood water was up to 1 metre deep in some areas. Images from the police and fire departments showed widespread damage, with streets strewn with mud, debris and upturned vehicles. Roads have been closed in the area.
Police said a woman from Břevenec died in the flooding but gave no further details. Teams from police and fire are searching for a missing woman who was swept away by flood waters from a stream in Oskava.
Bogus Basin picked up 7 inches over the past 24 hours and is expected to see another 6-10 inches over the next 24 hours.
The last time Bogus saw this much snow this late in the season was back on May 22, 2010 when the mountain saw over 16"!
While Long Valley has so far reported around 2" in accumulations as snow levels have dropped to 5,500ft this morning.

A vehicle makes its way through a flooded road in Hezhou, south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, June 7, 2020.
Hunan, Jiangxi and Guangxi, China
China's Xinhua news agency, quoting local authorities, reported on 08 June 2020 that heavy downpours and floods have left one person dead and four missing in central China's Hunan Province. Over 3,000 people have been evacuated and flooding has affected over 93,500 in 20 counties and districts. Parts of the province have seen heavy rain since late May.
Heavy rain was also reported in the neighouring province of Jiangxi from around 02 June. Since then, flooding has affected almost 380,000 and led to the evacuation of 21,000. A total of 117 houses were complete destroyed and wide areas of crops damaged.
Comment: Heavy rainfall also led to severe flooding in the city of Guangzhou in late May:
The storms produced several hurricane-force wind gusts, including a 110 mph gust in Winter Park, Colorado, according to the National Weather Service. Winds up to 99 mph were reported in Great Divide, Colorado, and 81 mph in Rock Springs, Wyoming. A 78 mph wind gust was reported at Denver International Airport.
Enough significant wind gusts were recorded on Saturday that a record was set for most significant wind gusts in one calendar day.
The derecho, a strong line of thunderstorms that produces hundreds of miles of straight-line wind damage, developed in far eastern Utah Saturday morning, then raced northeastward across Colorado and Wyoming into the western Dakotas and western Nebraska during the afternoon and evening hours, a track of at least 750 miles in about 12 hours, according to Elizabeth Leitman, a meteorologist with NOAA's Storm Prediction Center.
The line of storms formed on the southern flank of a developing low pressure system over the northern Rockies and southwestern Canada.
Comment: Another rare derecho killed three and cut power to half a million people across Pennsylvania and New Jersey last Wednesday.
Comment: The coronavirus crisis, in addition to earth changes affecting crop growth, and the losing value of currency which is set to get much worse in Western nations in particular, have made the production, availability, purchasing and distribution of food - a MAJOR global issue the likes of which we haven't seen in generations.
See related articles:
- Food supply shutdown: US meat processing plants suspend operations, dairy farmers told to quit, farmers dumping produce
- U.S. food lines are now measured in miles as desperation sets in all over the country
- 'The food supply chain is breaking,' Tyson Foods says as meat plants close
- Millions of chickens to be culled in US as lockdown disrupts processing plants
- Global food supply chains beginning to erode, crisis looms?
- COVID-19 lockdown = Auto-genocide? Food shortages likely as US farmers dump MOUNTAINS and LAKES of food
- By the time we notice we're hungry, it may be too late
- US food banks facing a 'tsunami' of people in need due to coronavirus lockdown

Flames from the Quail Fire burn an outbuilding near Winters (Yolo County), June 7, 2020
It destroyed 4 structures, threatened another 100 structures and prompted mandatory evacuations for Quail Canyon Road between Pleasants Valley Road and Highway 12, according to Cal Fire's Sonoma-Lake-Napa Unit. Pleasants Valley Road was closed.
Cal Fire said on Sunday that 600 firefighters were battling the blaze. Thirty engines responded to the scene along with seven hand crews, nine dozers, and "numerous firefighting air tankers from throughout the state are flying fire suppression missions as conditions allow."
Satellite images showed that smoke was blowing into Sacramento, according to the National Weather Service.












Comment: The following day a man was killed in a shark attack in northern New South Wales.