Extreme Temperatures
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Snowflake

Heavy snowfall continues in western to northern Japan, 128 cms (50 inches) in 24 hours for Hiroshima Prefecture

snow Japan
Snow is continuing to fall on and off in areas of western to northern Japan.

The Meteorological Agency says some mountainous areas have received 30 to 50 centimeters of snowfall for the 24 hours until noon on Saturday.

As of 11 AM, the city of Ono, Fukui Prefecture, had 83 centimeters of accumulated snow, and Kitahiroshima, in Hiroshima Prefecture, had 128 centimeters.

The city of Niigata, facing the Sea of Japan, has had 8 times the average snowfall for this time of year.

More snow is forecast, particularly for areas along the Sea of Japan. Weather officials are warning of icy roads, avalanches and snow-related accidents.


Comment: See also: Heavy snowfall traps 430 passengers overnight on stranded train in Japan


Attention

Thousands of dead fish on Alabama beaches likely died of cold temperatures

Residents near Little Lagoon in Gulf Shores are dealing with the effects of a large fish kill
© Brian KellyResidents near Little Lagoon in Gulf Shores are dealing with the effects of a large fish kill that occurred this week. Thousands of dead mullet in Gulf Shores can be seen in this photograph taken off of Minnow Lane Thursday, Jan. 11, 2018.
A large fish kill at Little Lagoon in Gulf Shores has locals holding their nose and gritting their teeth around usually scenic docks and beaches, but it's all part of the natural order of things, according to the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.

"This is not a new phenomenon," said Kevin Anson, a marine biologist with the ADCNR's Marine Resources Division. "In 2014 there was a small fish kill, in 2011 I think, we had another cold event, and it's been documented going back into the 1960s."

Thousands of fish -- mostly white mullet -- have gone belly-up on the surface of Little Lagoon or washed up on shore this week, leaving behind an ugly scene, a terrible smell, and a feeding frenzy for birds who don't mind dead mullet, even if they're a few days old.

Sun

First sunrise in 40 days: Arctic Russian city finally greets daylight as polar night ends (PHOTOS)

Sunrise
© Pavel Lvov / Sputnik
Having seen no sunlight for more than a month, the northern Russian port city of Murmansk has finally greeted a sunrise and a glimpse of daylight that lasted little more than half an hour.

Crowds of local residents gathered on top of a hill to watch the sun emerge from the horizon on Thursday, marking the end of the polar night. Despite sub-zero temperatures, people came to celebrate the end of 24-hour darkness, which began in early December.

The sight of the first sunrise has been drawing locals since 2007 for the annual event on the hill, which is appropriately named "Sunny mountain." People cheered and raised their cameras to capture the moment, as the first sunbeams appeared at 12:39pm.

The first daylight of the year does not last long, and Thursday's glimpse of sunlight had disappeared again within 34 minutes.

Snowflake

Heavy snowfall traps 430 passengers overnight on stranded train in Japan

Passengers on Friday walk out of a train on East Japan Railway Co.'s Shinetsu Line, where they spent the night after being stranded
© KYODOPassengers on Friday walk out of a train on East Japan Railway Co.'s Shinetsu Line, where they spent the night after being stranded between stations by heavy snowfall the night before in Sanjo, Niigata Prefecture
Around 430 passengers in Niigata Prefecture were forced to spend the night on a packed four-car train after it got stranded Thursday evening by heavy snow along the Sea of Japan coast.

According to rescue workers, five passengers โ€” a man in his 40s and four women in their teens and 20s โ€” were found unwell when they arrived, and the man was taken to a hospital. The train, which was bound for Nagaoka from Niigata, resumed service Friday morning about 15 hours after getting stuck.

More than half of the passengers on the train on the East Japan Railway Co. (JR East) Shinetsu Line were evacuated earlier in the morning, with families arriving to pick them up by car.

While JR East said the train's interior lights and heating worked properly, it only had one bathroom and the toilet paper ran out, passengers said. Some said they took turns using the seats to relieve passengers who were standing.


Igloo

Record snowfall creates snow tunnel on road in French Alps

Snow Tunnel
© Alain Duclos, Data Avalanche/AFPA front-end loader was used to carve a single lane through the avalanche that buried the road to Bonneval-sur-Arc in the French Alps.
Avalanches and record snow fall in the French Alps have buried some roads, leading to the creation of treacherous ice tunnels which drivers have to navigate on their way up or down the mountains.

Footage from Bonneval-sur-Arc, near the Val d'Isere ski resort, showed a front-end loader carving a path through packed snow that had swamped a local route.

The snow-clearing effort on Wednesday created a wall of ice on both sides of the road around six metres (20 feet) high and just wide enough for one vehicle at a time to pass through.

Snowflake

Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Food riots in Sudan - Snowmageddon in Switzerland - 200 year floods in France again (VIDEO)

France Avalanche warnings Jan 2018
As predicted in the grand solar minimum there will be food shortages. The forecast was for the shortages to begin in more impoverished nations as these areas people spend up to 50% of their wages on food. Even slight increases will have an effect, now in Sudan protesters killed over high grain and bread prices. France sees its second once in a 200 year flood in 2 years, Swiss snowmageddon as 13K+ tourists are trapped in 9 feet of snow. We are indeed repeating patterns. New type of cloud classifies geoengineering as a cloud type. Look up.


Comment: France: Avalanche warnings extended due to 'once in a lifetime snow storms' - heavy snow blanketing vast swathes of the planet (PHOTOS)


Snowflake Cold

Record cold wave wreaking havoc across South Korea

A snowplough clearing snow on a runway at Jeju International Airport, after the island was hit with heavy snowfall, on Jan 11, 2018.
© EPA-EFEA snowplough clearing snow on a runway at Jeju International Airport, after the island was hit with heavy snowfall, on Jan 11, 2018.
Extreme cold gripped South Korea on Thursday (Jan 11) - with a wind chill of minus 16 deg C in Seoul in the morning - and it is forecast to reach its peak on Friday, according to the country's weather agency.

Thursday's temperatures across the country hovered around minus 10 deg C in general, marking the coldest temperature this year.

Runways at Jeju Airport were closed earlier in the day due to heavy snowfall, suspending international flights until 11am, according to the Korea Airports Corp.

The country's power use soared in the morning amid a spike in heating demand, prompting Korea Power Exchange to order local companies to cut their power use as part of efforts to stabilise the level of electricity reserve.


Snowflake Cold

12 dead as normally balmy Bangladesh shivers in record low temperatures

Record cold in Bangladesh
© Xinhua/Naim-ul-karimA man squats by a fire during a winter morning in Dhaka, capital of Bangladesh, Jan. 9, 2018. Bangladesh Monday recorded the lowest temperature in five decades as mercury dipped to a chilling 2.6 degrees Celsius. According to local media, as many as 12 people have so far died in three northern Bangladesh districts due to the cold spell.
Temperatures in subtropical Bangladesh hit a 70-year-low today as authorities handed out tens of thousands of blankets to help the poor fight a record cold spell, officials said.

The mercury plunged to a frigid 2.6 degrees Celsius (36.7 degrees Fahrenheit) in some parts of Bangladesh, well below average in the low-lying riverine nation whose 160 million citizens are used to milder winters.

"It is the lowest temperature since authorities started keeping records in 1948," Shamsuddin Ahmed, head of the Bangladesh Meteorological Department, told AFP. The previous low of 2.8 degrees was recorded in 1968, he added.

Ahmed said Bangladesh was in the "grip of a severe cold wave", with temperatures dipping across all northern districts over the past few days.

The coldest temperatures were recorded in the border town of Tetulia, about 400 kilometres north of the capital Dhaka.

One local broadcaster reported that at least nine people had died from exposure, including six in one of the coldest locations in the northern district of Kurigram.

Officials said they were not aware of any deaths so far.


Comment: As many as 12 people have died so far in three northern Bangladesh districts due to the cold spell reports Xinhua.


Arrow Down

Wet dream of climate dictators: Climate skeptics to be exiled to 'international convict settlements'

Kerguelen Island  1903
© Wikimedia CommonsKerguelen Island 1903
Tony Thomas has unearthed a ten year old document that reads like a wet dream for mini-climate dictators. It envisages, by 2028, that the first climate skeptics will be convicted of denying the existence of climate change and exiled to three penal colonies in, wait for it, Kerguelen Island, South Georgia and New Zealand's South Island. Magically, these are "International convict settlements." So it's globalist prisons for the deplorables who say unpermitted things, because they are so bad, we wouldn't want them mixing with normal criminals back home who believe in climate change but rort the carbon markets.

Luckily their fantasy fiction is even less accurate than climate models. By 2030 they are tipping Africa as an economic powerhouse:
2030 ... the global economy today is less dominated by the big three of China, India and the US. Instead, economic blocs such as the African Union, the Latin American Trade Council and the Alliance of Turkic States have emerged as powerful players on the scene.
As Tony Thomas points out they also estimated oil would rise from $150 in 2008 to $400 by 2022. So far it has risen all the way to $60. They also predicted a global depression in 2009-18. Instead we got "Dow Record highs ". I guess they didn't see Donald Trump coming either.

Attention

Record number of cold stunned turtles for Texas

Padre Island National Seashore's Tom Backof holds a rehabilitated sea turtle before releasing it
Padre Island National Seashore's Tom Backof holds a rehabilitated sea turtle before releasing it
Florida sea turtles weren't the only ones impacted by last week's cold snap.

In Texas, more than 2,000 turtles were cold stunned, which breaks all state records. Many of the turtles have been brought to Texas A&M University in addition to NOAA Fisheries Galveston Laboratory Sea Turtle Hospital.

While the situation is more dramatic in Texas, the Panhandle is experiencing its second largest cold stun event. More than 850 cold-stunned turtles have been taken in for treatment at Gulf World Marine Institute after temperatures dropped in the bays.