Earth ChangesS


Attention

US, Indiana: Airport Runways in No Danger After Sinkhole Discovery

The runways at the Monroe County Airport appear to be in no immediate danger after sinkholes were discovered in May.


Cloud Lightning

South Korea: Seoul officials under fire for allegedly "man-made" disasters as "freakishly heavy downpour" toll hits 59

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© AFP, Jang Seung-YoonSouth Korean men take pictures of a mass of mud after a landslide hit a street in southern Seoul
Authorities came under fire Friday for allegedly "man-made" disasters in South Korea as the toll from this week's record rainfall rose to 59 dead and 10 missing.

Among the dead were 16 killed when mudslides hit southern parts of Seoul on Wednesday and 13 who perished in a landslide in the Chuncheon region, 100 kilometres (60 miles) east of the capital.

Three others died in a landslide at Paju north of Seoul.

Experts and news media attacked Seoul city authorities, accusing them of making the situation worse through an allegedly reckless development of hills near residential areas in the south of the capital.

Some hillsides were redeveloped into public parks and hiking tracks, meaning rainwater could not be absorbed so easily, and natural waterways were changed to make artificial lakes, critics said.

Question

New Zealand - Dogs Maul Dozens of Sheep in Shock Attack

Sheep Attacked
© Paul Taylor

Three dogs have savaged about 40 sheep on a Rotorua farm in the worst attack in memory, animal control officers say.

The animals caused between $8000 and $10,000 worth of damage when they killed the mostly pregnant ewes yesterday, Rotorua District Council animal control supervisor Kevin Coutts told NZPA.

"The farmer's pretty gutted. It's almost half his flock gone."

A passerby saw the carnage and contacted animal control about 3.15pm, he said.

One of the dogs, a labrador cross, was shot by animal control officers, but the other two - a mastiff cross and a huntaway cross - escaped.

"We're not talking the menacing breeds here," Mr Coutts said.

Bad Guys

US: Fracking Operations Cause Thousands of Earthquakes in Arkansas

Geologists say fracking wastewater disposal wells in central Arkansas caused an outbreak of thousands of minor earthquakes.

The Arkansas Oil and Gas Commission placed a ban on fracking wastewater wells in the area yesterday. A moratorium on well activity had been in place for months as geologists investigated a possible link between fracking activity and the outbreak of more than 1,200 earthquakes that measured lower than 4.7 in magnitude.

Fracking is a common term for hydraulic fracturing, a controversial gas drilling method that involves pumping water and chemicals deep underground to break up rock and free natural gas.

Fracking produces millions of gallons of wastewater, and the gas industry has been experimenting with different ways to dispose of it.

Bizarro Earth

Earth Is Getting Fatter

Earth's Girth
© NASAData from GRACE, twin satellites launched in 2002 that make precise measurements of Earth's gravity, suggest ice loss is in fact changing the shape of our planet.

(ISNS) - Like many of its inhabitants, the Earth is getting thicker around the middle - that's what a new study out this week says. The increased bulge is due to the melting of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets.

The Earth was never perfectly round to begin with, due to its spin. Just as an ice skater's skirt flutters up and away from her skates during her pirouette, water on Earth is more concentrated at the equator than at the poles.

As recently as 22,000 years ago, several miles of ice covered much of the northern hemisphere. Since the downward pressure of land-based ice has reduced as the ice melted, the land underneath has "rebounded" causing the Earth to become more spherical, said Steve Nerem, an aerospace engineer at the University of Colorado at Boulder and co-author of a new analysis of the Earth's bulge.

"It's a bit like a sponge, and it takes a while to come back to its original shape," Nerem said.

Scientists had observed the bulge shrinking for years, but then something changed. Around the middle of the 1990s, they noticed that the trend reversed and the Earth was getting fatter, like a ball squeezed at the top and bottom -- but until recently they didn't have the tools to understand why.

Cloud Lightning

US: Pennsylvania girl, 11, hit by lightning on sunny afternoon

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Canonsburg, Pennsylvania - An 11-year-old western Pennsylvania girl is recovering after she was struck by a bolt from the blue.

Lisa Wehrle tells the Observer-Reporter newspaper of Washington, Pa., that the sun was shining when her daughter, Britney, was struck by lightning Friday, apparently from a storm several miles away.

Lisa Wehrle says, "There was no rain. It was a beautiful day. All she heard was some thunder."

The lightning hit Britney as she was walking down a hill in North Strabane Township with a friend about 2:30 p.m. that day. The bolt hit her on the left shoulder, leaving a burn-like mark and exited her wrist, where it left another mark.

She was treated at a Pittsburgh hospital. Doctors discovered her arm was broken, but otherwise she's OK.

Cloud Lightning

US, Iowa: Record rainfall, flash flooding and fires in Dubuque

10.92 inches of rain fell in Dubuque overnight and rain continues to fall over eastern Iowa. That's a record for the day in Dubuque, and the most of any July day in history. There were unofficial reports of 12 inches in Galena and Peosta.


The rain caused widespread flash flooding, which covered parts of Highway 20 and forced officials to shut down both directions of traffic. Highway 20 was closed between Epworth and Peosta and also from mile marker 313 to the Illinois border. Highway 52 was closed from mile marker 51 to 52.

There were tornado warnings earlier in the evening Wednesday, but there have been no confirmed reports of tornado touchdowns or damage.

Dubuque County emergency responders were busy all night long helping people stranded in vehicles and putting out fires started as a result of the weather.

Phoenix

US: Unusual Lightning Strike Sparks Three Minnesota Fires

Lightning hitting a tree caused three fires on East Ninth Street in Duluth this morning, extensively damaging one house.

The fires were reported at 4:10 a.m. Firefighters arrived on the scene to find the front of the house at 21 E. Ninth St. fully involved. That fire was causing the siding on the house at 19 E. Ninth St. to melt and burn.

Three people living at 21 E. Ninth St. escaped the burning building.

The exterior fire at 21 E. Ninth St. was knocked down but could not be completely extinguished due to a gas-line break at ground level under the deck at the front of the house. Interior operations were delayed until it was determined that there was not a danger of an explosion. After that, firefighters entered the building to attack the blaze. The burning gas under the deck burned for more than an hour after the main fire was extinguished while city crews worked to find valves to stop the flow of gas to the building.

Nuke

Fukushima Long Ranked Most Hazardous Plant

Fukushima
© Reuters/Tokyo Electric Power Co/HandoutWorkers are seen around the 2nd cesium adsorption systems which are to be installed to treat highly radioactive water pooled at Tokyo Electric Power Co's (TEPCO) Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Fukushima prefecture, northern Japan, July 26, 2011.
Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant ranked as one of the most dangerous in the world for radiation exposure years before it was destroyed by the meltdowns and explosions that followed the March 11 earthquake.

For five years to 2008, the Fukushima plant was rated the most hazardous nuclear facility in Japan for worker exposure to radiation and one of the five worst nuclear plants in the world on that basis. The next rankings, compiled as a three-year average, are due this year.

Reuters uncovered these rankings, privately tracked by Fukushima's operator Tokyo Electric Power, in a review of documents and presentations made at nuclear safety conferences over the past seven years.

In the United States -- Japan's early model in nuclear power -- Fukushima's lagging safety record would have prompted more intensive inspections by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. It would have also invited scrutiny from the U.S. Institute of Nuclear Power Operations, an independent nuclear safety organization established by the U.S. power industry after the Three Mile Island accident in 1979, experts say.

Stop

Australia: Hendra virus still mystery for scientists

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© Unknown
The deadly Hendra virus was first detected in Australia nearly two decades ago but it still baffles scientists.

So far, they know that fruit bats carry the virus which can infect horses, dogs and humans.

But they do not know exactly what causes it, how it spreads or why it is so deadly.

There is also no known treatment.

Hendra virus first rang alarm bells in Australia with the sudden deaths in Brisbane of 14 horses, prominent race horse trainer Vic Rail and one of his stablehands in September 1994.

Initially called equine morbillivirus, scientists later renamed it Hendra virus (HeV) - after the Brisbane suburb where the first outbreak was detected - when they discovered it was a completely new genus of the paramyxoviridae family, which includes measles, mumps and canine distemper.