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Tue, 26 Oct 2021
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Attention

Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Winter 2019 - Weather extremes corporate media wants you to forget

cyclone idai damage
© Reuters / Philimon Bulawayo
Children in Zimbabwe carry drinking water over debris created by Cyclone Idai, March 22, 2019.
These are the events as winter 2019 winds down that the corporate media would like you to forget because of how far outside the Global Warming narrative these events have been.


Comment: For more information check out SOTT's latest monthly summary: SOTT Earth Changes Summary - March 2019: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs

To understand how and why these extreme weather events are occurring read Earth Changes and the Human Cosmic Connection by Pierre Lescaudron and Laura Knight-Jadczyk.


Snowflake

Pakistan receives record snowfall this winter - 50% more than normal

Malakand, Hazara, Murree, Gilgit-Baltistan (G-B) and Kashmir divisions have received 22.5 inches of snow so far.
© APP
Malakand, Hazara, Murree, Gilgit-Baltistan (G-B) and Kashmir divisions have received 22.5 inches of snow so far.
Pakistan faces unusually long winter, more snow expected

With an unusually long winter facing Pakistan this year, chief meteorologist of the Pakistan Meteorological Department (PMD) Khalid Malik on Wednesday said Malakand, Hazara, Murree, Gilgit-Baltistan (G-B) and Kashmir divisions have received 22.5 inches of snow so far.

In an interview with BBC Urdu, Malik said, "This winter, 50 per cent more snow has been recorded as compared to the previous years. By the end of the winter in March, as much as 50 inches of snow would have fallen."

He added, "More than 25 to 30 per cent rain has been recorded this winter in various parts of the country, due to which the Tarbela and Mangla dams level are also more than normal."



Seismograph

Strong 6.3-magnitude earthquake strikes Dili, East Timor

chart
The U.S. Geological Survey declared that an earthquake of a 6.3-magnitude has rattled 197 km NNW of Dili, East Timor at 21:55:01 GMT on Saturday.

The epicenter was initially located at 6.8491 degrees south latitude and 125.0425 degrees east longitude.

Meanwhile, the tremor hit 538.48 km deep into the ground.

SOTT Logo Media

SOTT Earth Changes Summary - March 2019: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs

nebraska flooding march 2019

Biblical flooding in Nebraska, March 2019
March 2019 was another month of significant extreme weather events, with record-breaking flooding, hailstorms, snowfalls and wildfires - on every continent, no matter the season.

While the media hypes the pseudo-scientific claim that climate change is man-made and whose effects should really only concern future generations, here and now the climate is shifting - and, besides mitigating some of its effects, there is nothing governments can do to prevent this shift from happening.

Among the 'highlights' in March were catastrophic flooding in the US Midwest after a 'winter hurricane' inundated much of the US with snow and rain. Nebraska was especially hardest hit as two-thirds of the state became an inland sea. Of the multiple powerful cyclones in the southern hemisphere last month, one caused unprecedented flooding in southeastern Africa and killed 1,000 people.

Huge dust-devils, 'snownados', 'thundersnow', and deluges of hail and rain occur with such regularity now, they're practically 'normal'. The same goes for spectacular meteor fireball events, which - after a decade of not seeing them - even the mainstream media reports on these days.

All that, and more, in this month's SOTT Earth Changes Summary...


Comment:
Check out the other recent releases:



Attention

New thermal area discovered at Yellowstone supervolcano

Yellowstone
© MLADEN ANTONOV/AFP/Getty Images
A view of the Lower Falls at the Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone National Park on May 11, 2016. Yellowstone, the first National Park in the US and widely held to be the first national park in the world, is known for its wildlife and its many geothermal features.
Scientists have discovered a new thermal area at Yellowstone National Park, which is believed to have grown in the past two decades.

Experts at the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory found what appeared to be a previously unknown pocket of warmth nestled between West Tern Lake and the Tern Lake thermal area after studying the latest thermal infrared images of the National Park taken in April 2017, according to the U.S. National Geodetic Survey.

The team then checked high resolution aerial photos of the same spot captured in 2017 by the The National Agriculture Imagery Program, and noticed dead trees and bright soil. These were the signs of a thermal area they were expecting to find. In contrast, a 1994 picture showed a crop of healthy trees which started to fade in a 2006 image.

Researchers therefore believe the thermal area near the northeast border of the Sour Creek resurgent dome first emerged in the late 1990s or early 2000s.

Comment: That record breaking year wasn't limited to just the Steamboat geyser and, when taken together, these events are likely to be a sign that there is an unusual uptick in activity at Yellowstone. And it's not only Yellowstone:


Fire

China forest fire that killed 30 started by lightning

FIRE CHINA
An investigation into a forest fire that killed 30 people in south-western China last month found the blaze was caused by lightning, state media reported late Friday.

The fire broke out on March 30 on a 3,700-metre mountain top in China's south-western Sichuan province after lightning struck an 18-metre pine tree, news agency Xinhua reported citing local authorities.


Comment: See also:


Arrow Down

Heavy April snowfall heightens Swiss avalanche risk

The avalanche risk in Switzerland for Friday April 5th.
© SLF
The avalanche risk in Switzerland for Friday April 5th.
After a healthy dose of spring weather, winter made a return in the early hours of Wednesday with the country waking on Thursday to cold, wet - and sometimes white - conditions.

Up to a metre and a half of new snow has fallen in the Alps in the last 24 hours while the Swiss plateau also saw snowfall during the day on Thursday.

The heaviest snowfalls were seen in central Switzerland and in the western part of the canton of Ticino.

Traffic on the crucial north - south A2 axis was subject to regular delays during the day.


Cloud Precipitation

Evacuations ordered after unprecedented floods hit Iran - Golestan province received 70% of its annual rainfall in ONE day - UPDATE

Iran floods 2019
© REUTERS / Tasnim News Agency
Iran has ordered the evacuation of about 70 villages in the south-western province of Khuzestan due to a growing risk of floods, state media report.

At least 45 people have died in the past two weeks after heavy rains, with flooding affecting at least 23 of the country's 31 provinces.

The orders come as Foreign Minister Javad Zarif accused US sanctions of impeding aid efforts to affected areas.

"This isn't just economic warfare; it's economic terrorism," Mr Zarif tweeted.


US sanctions imposed after President Donald Trump withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal last year have caused a shortage of rescue helicopters.

The Iranian authorities have requested military help, including helicopters and amphibious armoured personnel carriers, for the rescue efforts.


Comment: Deadly flash floods strike again in Afghanistan and Iran - now over 80 dead since mid-March

Update: Accuweather on 4th April reports:
Dozens of people are dead and more than a third of the country's roads have been damaged from the rounds of flooding rain that have struck Iran since the middle of March.

The death toll climbed to 62 at midweek, according to AFP.

Lives have been lost in 11 of Iran's 31 provinces, including 21 deaths in the southern province of Fars.

Heavy rain began slamming the country on March 19, with the deadliest day for flooding following on March 25. April started with more torrential rain targeting the region.

In addition to the deaths, the government has reported that 36 percent of the country's entire network of roads has been damaged.

Eighty-four bridges and nearly 2,200 rural roads have been washed away, Behnam Saeedi, a spokesman for the National Disaster Management Organisation, told state TV, the AFP stated.

"Across 15 provinces, 141 rivers burst their banks and around 400 landslides were reported," Saeedi said.

While drier weather graced the region for recovery and storm cleanup late this week, flooding downpours may return to the hard-hit areas Friday night into Saturday.

"There can be an AccuWeather Local StormMax™ of 75 mm (3 inches) in and along the southwestern slopes of Iran's Zagros Mountains," said AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Dave Houk. "With the ground saturated, new flooding and landslides can easily be triggered."

Prior to the downpours affecting Iran, Houk is concerned for thunderstorms to erupt from central Saudi Arabia (near Riyadh) to southern Iraq on Friday afternoon. These thunderstorms produce winds strong enough to cause damage, as well as kick up dust storms ahead of any rain.

Early estimates put the losses from the flooding in the agriculture sector at 47 trillion rials (1.1 billion USD), according to Radio Farda.

Aside from the impact to communities, ancient relics have also been damaged throughout Iran from the recent flooding.

Some of these cultural sites, including Chogha Zanbil, date back to pre-500 B.C.
UPDATE April 5th: In a show of solidarity with the Iranian people, the EU has announced an initial allocation of 1.2 million euros in financial assistance, while the US (as usual) hampers humanitarian efforts to ameliorate the suffering. Fort Russ reports:
The European Commission announced the provision of initial financial assistance to Iran to overcome the effects of the largest floods in the country in recent decades. Brussels allocates 1.2 million euros, according to the Iranian news agency Tasnim on April 5.

Emergency funding will be directed to the most vulnerable communities in Iran, the EU executive said.

The EU Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Management, Christ Stylianidis, said that "at present, the EU is fully in solidarity with the Iranian people and will help provide substantial support in the affected areas."

Assistance will be distributed with the assistance of humanitarian organizations, including the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

While rescue teams are involved in flood-hit areas, US sanctions have blocked all Iran's Red Crescent accounts and banned Tehran from receiving foreign assistance, including rescue helicopters, Tasnim notes.



Snowflake

Colorado ski resorts smash March records for snowfall

A skier skis just below the Pallavicini Cornice at the Arapahoe Basin Ski Area March 19
© Andy Cross, The Denver Post
A skier skis just below the Pallavicini Cornice at the Arapahoe Basin Ski Area March 19.
This past March will go down in the record books for Arapahoe Basin Ski Area, Breckenridge Ski Resort, Copper Mountain Resort and Keystone Resort, which all received more March snowfall than ever before.

At Breckenridge, spokeswoman Sara Lococo said March's 111 total inches surpassed the previous high of 98 inches that Breckenridge received in March 2001. That's 13.3 percent more snow than March 2001. The 111 inches also makes March 2019 the third snowiest month on record at Breckenridge and the snowiest month outside of a pair of Januarys. The highest monthly snowfall total on record for the resort was 120 inches in January 2014, followed by 112 inches in January 1996.

At Copper Mountain, spokeswoman Taylor Prather said March 2019's 98 inches of snow was just about 14 percent more snowfall than Copper's previous March high, the 86 inches the resort received in March 2001. This past month also ranks as the fourth snowiest month on record since the resort opened in 1972. It's also the second snowiest month of this past decade.

At Keystone, March's 94 inches of snow was just under 19 percent more snow than the previous record March: March 2011's 79 inches of snow. March 2019 comes in as the third snowiest month on record at Keystone, only behind the 128 inches received in December 1983 and the 127 inches that fell in January 1996.

Comment: Incredible snow amounts have also been recorded across the Sierra Nevada this year. Some ski resorts have received 550 to 600+ inches (14 to 15 m) of snow so far.

The Sierra Nevada snowpack is well above normal, at 162 percent of average. Chris Orrock, with the California Department of Water Resources, explained that the amount of snowpack this year is significant.

"If all the snow in the field we are standing in right now melted right now," he said, "we would be standing in 51 inches of water." He says this is the fourth largest amount of snow in recorded history.


Snowflake

World Snow Wrap, April 5 - Spring in the US, a powder week in Hakuba and snowing in Whistler and Europe

Mid-winter vibes this week in Hakuba on April 3.
© Hakuba.com
Mid-winter vibes this week in Hakuba on April 3.
While it is officially spring, winter hasn't let go in many parts of the world with snow forecast this week in Europe, North America and Japan.

USA

The last couple of weeks saw a mix of snow and weather conditions across the western US with good falls in Colorado on the last weekend of March while California also saw out March with some nice powder after a 40cm snowfall on March 29.

Of course, after the huge amounts of snow in February, most resorts in the US have a very deep snowpack and the spring skiing has been excellent. After a couple of days of sunshine, the first week of April saw 20-30cms on the upper mountain in Squaw Valley and 15cms in Mammoth.