Storms
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Bizarro Earth

Heavy Snow on the Korean Peninsula

Korean Peninsular
© NASANASA images courtesy MODIS Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC. Acquired February 14, 2011.
In mid-February 2011, residents along South Korea's east coast were struggling to dig out from the heaviest snowfall in more than a century. The BBC reported that hundreds of stranded motorists awaited rescue, and hundreds of homes had collapsed under the weight of heavy snow. The South Korean government had deployed 12,000 soldiers to assist and rescue residents.

The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA's Aqua satellite acquired this natural-color image on February 15, 2011. Mostly clear skies allowed MODIS a nearly uninterrupted view of the Korean Peninsula. East of Seoul, clusters of small white clouds cast shadows onto the surface below. But most of the white on the peninsula is snow.

Agence France-Presse reported that the port city of Samcheok recorded 100 centimeters (39 inches) of snowfall on February 11 and 12 - the heaviest snowfall amount since record keeping began in 1911. In the west, Seoul escaped heavy snow, although the Han River froze over for the first time in years, according to the BBC.

Info

US: Winter Storm Watch Issued For Sierra Nevada

The National Weather Service has issued a Winter Storm Watch for the Sierra Nevada from Tuesday afternoon through Wednesday evening.

Light snow and strong gusty winds will linger over the mountains tonight.

A stronger storm is expected Tuesday afternoon through Wednesday.

Six to sixteen inches of snow is expected from 4000 through 5000 feet. One to three feet of snow is possible above 6000 through 8000 feet.

Cloud Lightning

Virginia, US: 'Thundersnow' behind mysterious blue flashes of light?

lightning
© Associated PressWere the eerie flashes of blue light similar to that in the picture above thundersnow — or something else?
Eerie flashes of blue lit up the snowy sky during this week's powerful coastal storm, but no one seems to know for sure what caused it.

Howard Bernstein, morning meteorologist at WUSA 9 in Washington, said he believes the lights were lightning strikes associated with "thundersnow."

The National Weather Service reported frequent lightning with Wednesday's storm, but said those who saw the flashes of light would have also heard thunder, and that wasn't the case around Prince William.

Bernstein says that's not necessarily true.

"I've given this a little bit of thought (and I also did a little research). I believe we were seeing lightning that was refracted by all of the ice crystals/snow flakes to give it more of a blue appearance," he said this morning in an e-mail. "Also, the thunder was probably quite muffled by all of the snowflakes, so if you weren't very close to the lightning, you probably couldn't hear the thunder."

Comment: Read the following article to get an insight into the true nature of lightning and other electric phenomena.


Cloud Lightning

South Africa: Karoo Hit by Flash Floods

flood
© Times Live
The Karoo was hit by flash floods at the weekend.

More than 100mm of rain fell in 24 hours on Saturday and Sunday in and around the central Karoo towns of Graaff-Reinet and Nieu Bethesda, The Herald Online reported on Monday.

In some places, 75mm fell in just 30 minutes, causing farm dams to burst.

Police and disaster management officials were on high alert and ready to evacuate residents where necessary.

In Graaff-Reinet, the town's Nqweba Dam swelled to its highest level in more than 36 years on Sunday.

The Herald Online reported that the dam rose to 116 percent capacity on Sunday morning.

"It looks like more rain is on the way," said the area's disaster management head, Christopher Rhoode.

Cloud Lightning

Afghanistan: Floods, Heavy Snow Kill 25 in Two Weeks

Afghan snow
© Masoud Popalzai/IRINBad weather hampers deliveries
Kabul - Flash floods and heavy snowfall killed 25 people and damaged up to 3,000 houses in different parts of Afghanistan over the past two weeks, according to government officials.

At least 20 people died and 53 have been injured in Parwan, Herat, Wardak and Daykundi provinces, the Afghanistan National Disasters Management Authority (ANDMA) said. Five people lost their lives in mudslides and snowstorms in the northeastern province of Badakhshan, the provincial department of the Afghan Red Crescent Society (ARCS) said.

Shindand District in the western province of Herat is among the worst affected areas where, in addition to four deaths and over a dozen injured, almost 2,600 families have been affected, officials said.

"In the beginning we had difficulties in delivering aid to Shindand because of insecurity and road inaccessibility," said Shafiq Behrozyan, a spokesman for the governor of Herat, adding that some humanitarian agencies had also opposed the transportation of aid items by military planes. "But we managed to send aid consignments by road."

The UN World Food Programme (WFP) said it had dispatched 250 tons of food aid to Shindand and that distribution was ongoing.

Sun

2nd M-Class Flares Now Earth Directed

Image
A second M-class in as many days has been unleashed from a different sunspot region named as 1158.

Equation: Sunspots => Solar Flares (charged particles) => Magnetic Field Shift => Shifting Ocean and Jet Stream Currents => Extreme Weather and Human Disruption (mitch battros 1998)

Watch for extenuating extreme weather over the next 72 hours. However, if further regions become active with M-class or larger flares, extreme weather phenomena will continue as related to time-linked means.

Cloud Lightning

Australia: Towns in WA's east flooded after heavy rains

Image
© unknownWarburton received twice its monthly rainfall in a day
More than 20 residents in the Eastern Wheatbelt town of Nungarin have been forced from their homes by flash flooding.

The town has received more than 100 millimetres of rain in five hours.

The Shire of Nungarin says the heavy rain has caused damage to local infrastructure and inundated the entire road network.

Nungarin Shire's Chief Executive, Bill Fensome, says many residents had to sandbag their properties.

"Like a river that you wouldn't believe, we had to drag one of our residents out of his house, an elderly gentleman, the water pressure trying to get him out was unbelievable," he said.

Local farmer Garry Coombs says the rain is continuing to fall.

"And I went and looked in the gauge at 7pm. It hasn't let up for the last two and a half hours, it's just been constant rain," he said.

Meanwhile, residents of the remote Aboriginal community of Warburton are in recovery mode after a flash flood inundated the community.

83 millimetres of rain fell on the town yesterday flooding parts of the town to two metres.

Bizarro Earth

Strong Solar Flare May Charge Up Northern Lights Tonight

Aurora
© ISS Crew Earth Observations/Image Science & Analysis Laboratory, Johnson Space CenterThis striking aurora image was taken during a geomagnetic storm that was most likely caused by a coronal mass ejection from the Sun on May 24, 2010. The ISS was located over the Southern Indian Ocean.
A powerful solar flare, hurled into space when superhot gases erupted on the sun yesterday (Feb, 13), might cause a display of the aurora borealis for parts of the northern United States overnight tonight (Feb. 14).

The sun unleashed the solar flare yesterday at about 12:30 p.m. EST (1730 GMT) from a sunspot region that was barely visible last week. Since then, it has grown in size to more than 62,000 miles (100,000 kilometers) across - nearly eight times the width of our Earth.

The flare was categorized by the NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center in Colorado as a Class M6.6 and is the strongest solar flare observed in 2011. It could ramp up northern lights displays for skywatchers living in northern latitudes and graced with clear skies.

Such a flare, covering more than 1 billion square miles of the sun's surface (called the photosphere), was described as "moderate" in intensity. Class M flares are stronger than the weakest category (Class C). They are second only to the most intense Class X solar flares, which can cause disruptions to satellites and communications systems and pose a hazard to astronauts in space.

NOAA's Prediction Center has forecast the possibility of additional solar flares from the same sunspot region over the next two or three days.

Cloud Precipitation

Tropical Cyclone Bingiza Hits Madagascar

Tropical Cyclone Bingiza
© NASATropical Cyclone Bingiza.
Tropical Cyclone Bingiza made landfall on Madagascar on Feb. 14, 2011.

The U.S. Navy's Joint Typhoon Warning Center (JTWC) reported that, as of about noon Madagascar time on Feb. 14, Bingiza had maximum sustained winds of 98 mph (155 kilometers per hour) and gusts up to 120 mph (195 kph).

NASA's Terra satellite captured this image of Bingiza at 10:00 a.m. local time on Feb. 13, 2011. In the image, Bingiza's eye approaches northern Madagascar, and a spiral arm grazes Antananarivo.

Although Bingiza would weaken somewhat over land, the storm was expected to re-strengthen after passing over northern Madagascar, thanks to high sea surface temperatures, according to a NASA statement. The JTWC forecast that, on the western side of Madagascar, the storm would travel southward, roughly tracing the island's west coast.

Attention

Sri Lanka: Floods destroy over a third of rice harvest

Grain
© Amantha Perera/IRINFood prices have increased after the floods
Sri Lanka will lose over one million tons from its upcoming paddy harvest due to recent flooding, officials say.

"We expected a yield of around 2.75 million metric tons from the harvest due in March to April," Kulugammanne Karunathileke, secretary to the Ministry of Agriculture, told IRIN. "After the heavy rains we will only get around 1.75 million."

Karunathileke, the highest ranking official at the ministry, said the country had expected a bumper crop - until flooding, which began in January, left some paddy fields under water for up to 11 days. The worst-hit areas are in the eastern districts of Ampara, Batticaloa, Polonnaruwa, Trincomalee and the north-central district of Anuradhapura.

Together they account for over 1.2m tons of the harvest.