Storms
S


Snowflake

November snowstorm shocker dumps up to 30 inches in Michigan

Steven Holston of Detroit helps out an aging family member by managing their snow on E. Grand Blvd. as snow hit the region Monday, Nov. 11, 2019.
© Mandi Wright, Detroit Free PressSteven Holston of Detroit helps out an aging family member by managing their snow on E. Grand Blvd. as snow hit the region Monday, Nov. 11, 2019.
The unseasonable snowstorm that pounded southeast Michigan with more than a half-foot of snow on Monday will conclude in metro Detroit by Tuesday morning — but only to see temperatures plunge to single-digit wind chills.

The snowfall snarled traffic across the region as Metro Airport was hit by 7.6 inches by early Monday evening, Ann Arbor had 9.3 inches, Flint 7.7. The highest snowfall in metro Detroit was 9.6 inches in Wixom.

Elsewhere across the state, snowfall totals varied but were especially intense along Lake Michigan because of the lake effect, with some communities getting about 18 inches of snowfall, said National Weather Service meteorologist Jeff Lutz.

"Lake effect snow can fall very intensely for a short period in a small area," he said.

Grand Rapids and Alpena had 5.5 inches, but Gaylord and Petoskey got only a trace of white.


Comment: Today, MLive reports:
Complete snow totals look from Veterans Day snowstorm, including 30 inches burying a city

Michigan experienced its first widespread snowstorm yesterday. The only sections really missing the snow were far northeast Lower Michigan and part of the U.P. The snow totals following reflect the widespread south across southern Lower and the very heavy lake effect in the snowbelts.

snow totals
Statewide look at snow totals

The map above shows the storm system snow that moved across the southern half of Lower Michigan. Southeast Lower was hit the hardest from the widespread storm system, with five to nine inches being very common.

You can also see the huge snow totals around the Leelanau Peninsula.

snow map



Airplane

Plane slides off icy runway at Chicago O'Hare Airport

Plane window
© REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
Terrified passengers could only hold on for dear life as their American Eagle flight touched down on the icy runway at Chicago's O'Hare Airport Monday morning before sliding off the tarmac amid blizzard-like conditions.

Miraculously, no one among the 38 passengers and three crew members was injured in the incident, and everyone on board was evacuated safely.

Cloud Lightning

Cyclone Bulbul leaves 8 people dead as it smashes into India and Bangladesh coasts

Cyclone Bulbul
© AFPVillagers gather in front of a collapsed house after Cyclone Bulbul hit the area in Bakkhali, Bangladesh, on November 10, 2019
Eight people died and more than two million others spent a night huddled in storm shelters as Cyclone Bulbul smashed into the coasts of India and Bangladesh with fierce gales and torrential rains, officials said Sunday.

The cyclone packed winds of up to 120 kilometers per hour when it hit late Saturday, closing ports and airports in both countries.

Three people were killed in India's West Bengal State, two after uprooted trees fell on their homes and another after being struck by the falling branches of a tree in Kolkata. A fourth person died in a wall collapse in nearby Odisha State.

In Bangladesh, four more were killed by falling trees and at least 20 people were injured. The cyclone also damaged some 4,000 mostly mud and tin-built houses, Bangladesh's disaster management secretary Shah Kamal told AFP.


Tornado2

Large waterspout filmed near Elaphite Islands in Croatia

waterspout
As Morski writes on the 9th of November, 2019, some dramatic footage taken of a large waterspout has emerged from the beautiful Elaphite (Elafiti) islands close to the City of Dubrovnik.

A Morski reader from the island of Lopud, one of the islands in question, recorded it and claims that it was the largest that has been seen there in recent years, and this one on the video is far from the only one.


Tornado1

Massive waterspouts filmed swirling over Italian city of Genoa

Double tornado today in Genoa, Italy
Double tornado in Genoa, Italy
Waterspouts swirled through dark skies above Genoa on Thursday.

They formed above the water of the Ligurian Sea with the ominous northern Italian cityscape as the backdrop.

President of the Liguria Region, Giovanni Totti, said via Twitter that a fireworks displays set for the Piazza de Ferrari would be postponed due to the weather.


Cloud Lightning

Lightning bolt kills 6, injures 11 in Uganda

lightning
Six people were killed and 11 others critically injured when lightning struck on Thursday in Uganda's northern district of Pader.

Police Commander, Tom Bainomugisha, told Xinhua by telephone that the group of people was gathering under a big tree when the lightning struck during a morning drizzle. "The group had spent the night in prayers for a bereaved person when the incident happened,'' Bainomugisha said.

"The group had spent the night in prayers for a bereaved person when the incident happened,'' Bainomugisha said.

Tornado2

Video shows Greek factory torn apart by destructive tornado

Tornado hits Greece factory
© CatersCCTV cameras caught the moment the tornado tore through warehouses in Kalamata in Greece on Monday
This is the shocking moment a violent tornado almost destroys a factory in Greece after shattering windows and ripping off sections of the walls.

The freak storm hit Kalamata in Greece on Monday, causing damage to buildings including the Papadimitriou factory which produces vinegar and olive oil.

Footage from Papadimitriou's security cameras shows the warehouses being torn to shreds by the winds which also battered the vehicles parked outside.

Around 60 workers were inside the factory at the time and went into panic as the weather left a trail of destruction.

The factory owner revealed the devastation lasted around three to four minutes.

He told Alpha TV: 'It was a sudden loud noise and we saw the wind lifting heavy objects of 60 kilos (132lbs). We did not know what to do.'


Attention

Changes in high-altitude winds over the South Pacific produce long-term effects

Changes in Ocean-Atmosphere System
© Graphic: Helge Arz, IOWSchematic depiction of changes in the ocean-atmosphere system in the South Pacific in comparison, throughout the precession cycles (21,000 years).
In the past million years, the high-altitude winds of the southern westerly wind belt, which spans nearly half the globe, didn't behave as uniformly over the Southern Pacific as previously assumed. Instead, they varied cyclically over periods of ca. 21,000 years. A new study has now confirmed close ties between the climate of the mid and high latitudes and that of the tropics in the South Pacific, which has consequences for the carbon budget of the Pacific Southern Ocean and the stability of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. The study was prepared by Dr Frank Lamy, a geoscientist at the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research, together with researchers from Chile, the Netherlands, the USA and Germany, and has just been released in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS).

Changes in the southern westerly wind belt produce fundamental effects on the intensity and position of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, which is the world's largest ocean current and shapes ocean circulation worldwide. In this regard, one key factor is the wind-driven upwelling of CO2-rich deep-water masses, which, due to their comparative warmth, influences both the stability of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and the carbon budget of the Southern Ocean.

On the basis of sediment cores, the team of researchers investigated precipitation-driven changes in sediment input in the Pacific off the coast of Chile. Assessing the past 1 million years, they identified what are known as precession cycles: changes caused by natural variations in the Earth's orbital parameters; in this case, cyclical changes in the rotation of its axis that occurred roughly every 21,000 years. Changes in these and other orbital cycles are generally considered to be a major driver for the alternation between extended glacials and interglacials over the past million years.

Ice Cube

Freak hailstorm destroys crops worth 'hundreds of millions of dollars' in South Australia's Riverland region

Hailstones blanket Bruce Hewett's property at Glossop, South Australia
© Lauren CrespHailstones blanket Bruce Hewett's property at Glossop, South Australia.
Crops worth "hundreds of millions of dollars" have been destroyed during a freak hailstorm in South Australia's Riverland region.

Wind gusts of up to 70kph were recorded during the storm, which hit the area about 6pm on Monday.

"It would be hundreds of millions of dollars of damage," Neville, a local farmer, told ABC Radio Adelaide on Tuesday.

He said the storm had swept through the towns of Murray Bridge, Swan Reach and Wynarka.

Other properties hit were in Barmera, Monash and surrounds, where farmers grow crops including stone fruit, nuts and grains.

At the Renmark Airport weather station, nearly five millimetres of rain was recorded in less than half an hour.

A severe thunderstorm warning for damaging winds and large hailstones was issued by the Bureau of Meteorology about an hour before the storm hit.


Comment: Erratic seasons and extreme weather devastating crops around the world

Crop and cattle losses are on the rise everywhere, whether it is due to extensive drought, massive hail, epic flooding, huge dust storms, unexpected frosts, and even epidemics.


Tornado2

Waterspout filmed in Martin County, Florida

Waterspout off Hutchinson Island
Waterspout off Hutchinson Island
Sightings of a water spout prompted a tornado warning in Martin County Tuesday afternoon off the coast of Hutchinson Island.

The warning lasted about 10 minutes between 4:20 and 4:30 p.m.

There were no initial reports of injuries.