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Tue, 26 Oct 2021
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Cloud Precipitation

Persistent downpours bring major flooding threat to lower Mississippi Valley

St Louis flood
© Huy Mach/St. Louis Post-Dispatch/TNS via Getty Images
A slow moving storm system will create dangerous flooding situation in and around the lower Mississippi Valley this week. The downpours will be heavy and persistent because of moisture incursion from the Gulf of Mexico.

The slow-moving nature of the storm will enhance the risk of heavy downpours from parts of the southern and central plains to parts of the Ohio and Mississippi Valleys. It will be a combination of the moisture of the storm and the moisture coming in from the Gulf of Mexico that will trigger extremely heavy downpours and this will lead to major flooding in the region.

From Tuesday to Friday, several spells of heavy rain will continue to pound eastern Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Arkansas and southern Missouri. Later this week the spell of heavy rain will cross the Mississippi river and move into Mississippi and southern Indiana.

In cities like Memphis, Tennessee, and Dallas, a month's worth of rain could be breached in just one week.

Cloud Precipitation

Heavy thunderstorms and flash flooding to hit UAE, Iran and Oman this week

UAE flooding
© youtube
A series of tropical disturbances will move across the Middle East this week, bringing heavy thunderstorms. This will lead to flash flooding across much of UAE, Iran and Oman.

Locally heavy downpours will develop over the next few days thereby causing normally dry rivers to swell, inundating some roads. The maximum threat of flooding will be from eastern Oman to southeastern Iran. Eastern Oman cities like Muscat and Sohar will be majorly affected by flash flooding this week. A low-pressure system moving over Iran on Tuesday and Wednesday will lead to an increase in thunderstorm activity and these are the days when the risk of flooding will be the greatest. These severe thunderstorms will move into southeast Iran as well and will affect areas from Bahl to Chabahar and inland towards Zahedan.

In Dubai also, rain will occur for several days this week. But the city will escape the flood fury. Despite this, the downpours will lead to travel disruptions. The people in the city have been warned not to drive on flooded roads.

Attention

Rare beaked whale washes up dead in Zeeland, Netherlands

Dead beaked whale
© Ferial De Wilde
Dead beaked whale
The dead body of a rare beaked whale measuring almost five metres has been washed up close to the Zeeland port of Vlissingen.

The body of the mammal, which weighed some 930 kilos, has been taken to Utrecht University where vets will try to determine the cause of death, local news website PZW says.

The last time a beaked whale washed up in the Netherlands was in 2013, off the coast of Wadden Sea island Schiermonnikoog. The last one to be found in Zeeland was in 1992.

Beaked whales are unique among toothed whales in that most species only have one pair of teeth. There are 22 species of the Ziphiidae family and it is not clear which sort was found in Vlissingen.

Dead beaked whale
© Ferial De Wilde

Magnify

Scotland's beached whales suffered from heavy metal poisoning

beached whales
© Patrick Down via Flickr (CC BY-NC)
Beached whale in the Firth of Forth, Scotland, being removed using earth-moving equipment, September 2013.
High levels of toxins mercury and cadmium have been found in all organs of the whales recently beached on Scotland's North Sea coast, including the brain. The research shows that rising mercury levels in the oceans leads to toxic stress in the long-lived marine mammals.

A pod of whales stranded in Fife in 2012 had high concentrations of toxic chemicals, some of which had reached the mammals' brains, scientists have discovered.

The pod of long-finned pilot whales were stranded on a beach between Anstruther and Pittenweem in Scotland, on 12th September 2012.

Out of the 31 mammals which beached only 10 could be refloated and 21 - 16 females and five males - died.

Snowflake Cold

160% above seasonal norm: Moscow experiences one of its snowiest winters in history

Moscow snow
© Sergei Fadeichev/TASS
More than 160% of seasonal norm.

From March 3, 2016 the increase of fresh snow in the city was 245 cm (8 feet).

And there is still almost a month of winter weather.

This means this winter will be one of the snowiest in the annals of Moscow weather.

Thanks to Martin Siebert for this link

"Global Warming or Climate Change," says Martin. "I know."

Comment: Moscow has heaviest Spring snowstorm in over 50 years


Moon

Unexplained 'sonic boom type of sounds' shaking Alhambra, California

Alhambra, CA
© Vice
Alhambra, California
Out of nowhere on Tuesday night, around 8 PM, Alex Arevalos, a student and graphic designer in Alhambra, California, ten miles east of downtown Los Angeles, heard a single, loud thud.

He immediately asked his sister if she'd slapped his bedroom wall. "She said she didn't, so I automatically blamed the train," Arevalos, who lives near train tracks, told VICE.

Then on Thursday around midnight, two similar sounds woke up Arevalos's father, and when father and son spoke about it in the morning, the younger Arevalos became convinced it was something abnormal. "This time as soon as I heard it, and heard the walls shake a bit, I listened for the train, but didn't hear anything," adding, "I can tell the difference now [between] the train and the booms."

Arevalos is far from alone. According to the local news site Alhambra Source, residents first reported hearing the booms on February 16 when a woman named Noelle Dominguez alerted her neighbors to them in a private section of the community social network nextdoor.com. "I know this sounds weird. But since [I've been] living in Alhambra, every other night or so I hear a loud explosion-like noise," she wrote. Soon, other nextdoor.com users shared similar experiences with the booms, according to Alhambra Source.

Two nights later, Alhambra Police Department posted about the booms on Facebook. Just after 8 PM, officers received reports of "a loud explosion heard in the northern end of our city." The police wrote that they've received multiple similar reports in recent weeks, but that "unfortunately, we were unable to locate the origin. We are as puzzled as everyone," Jerry Johnson, the Alhambra police sergeant, told VICE. He said two on-duty officers heard the booms recently, and they rushed toward the source, arriving just 90 seconds after the sound dissipated.

Comment: These booms could be from vibrations in the earth's crust brought about by earthquakes or other seismic activity.

See also: Earth Changes and the Human Cosmic Connection


Ice Cube

High winds invert waterfall in Catalonia, Spain, freezing nearby vegetation

inverted waterfall
© Twitter meteoprades ‏@meteoprades
Strong winds sweeping through Capafonts, Spain have created this amazing inverted waterfall on March 5, 2016.

Due to the frigid temperatures in the region, the water instantly freezes, covering the nearby vegetation with icicles despite any signs of winter around.

According to gravity water falls down.

frozen
However, if you add an additional factor, such as strong wind, the water can start flowing upwards:


Red Flag

Shark bites boy in Ocean Reef Park, Florida

Shark attacks
A metro east 12-year-old is recovering from a shark bite while on vacation in Florida.

Michael Wilson was wading in three feet of water Friday at Ocean Reef Park, when a shark sunk its teeth into his foot.

He has a fracture and some scratches.

They say the entire ordeal was pretty scary but the Wilsons still caught a Cardinal's spring training game in Jupiter Sunday afternoon before heading home to O'Fallon, Illinois.

Wilson even used his injury to get the attention and an autograph from his hero Matt Holliday.

Michael Wilson

Michael Wilson

Red Flag

Red tides hit Hong Kong beaches

Red tide
Beach-goers advised not to swim at Clear Water Bay Second Beach and Silver Mine Bay Beach, while brown foam appears on Cheung Chau shoreline

Several parts of Hong Kong were hit by suspected red tides over the weekend, with swathes of the Cheung Chau shoreline caked with a putrid, foamy discharge that put off many beach-goers.

Pictures taken by local islanders and tourists on Saturday and Sunday showed parts of the island's Tung Wan Beach covered in the light brown froth.

Red tides, or algal blooms, are areas of seawater discoloured - brown, pink or red - by large concentrations of micro-organisms that may deplete levels of dissolved oxygen. Sightings usually peak in the spring.

A reader photo showing the foamy waters at Cheung Chau over the weekend.

A reader photo showing the foamy waters at Cheung Chau over the weekend.

Alarm Clock

6.2 magnitude earthquake strikes off Samoa

Samoa map
A 6.2 magnitude earthquake has struck off the Samoa islands, Geoscience Australia and the US Geological Survey (USGS) reported, adding that the epicenter of the quake is about 200km from Apia, the capital and largest city of the island country.

Apia has about 37,000 residents.

The earthquake depth is 29.8 km, USGS said. The European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre (EMSC) put the depth of the earthquake at 2km.


According to the most recent USGS estimate, the magnitude of the quake is 5.8 and it took place just 96km from the town of Hihifo in Tonga.

There have not been any reports of injuries or damage, and no tsunami warning has been issued.

The part of South Pacific Ocean where Tonga and Samoa are located is considered to be one of the most seismically active areas of the world due to high rates of convergence between the Australia and Pacific plates, the USGS said.