Storms
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Cloud Lightning

Six women killed by lightning strikes in Rajasthan, India

lightning
© 123RF
Six women were killed and five others injured after being struck by lightning in four separate incidents in Baran district of Rajasthan. All the women were daily labourers and were working in the fields when lightning struck them. Local MLA Praptap Singh Singhvi said relief amount from the CM Relief fund will be given to the family members of the deceased.

Five women labourers, Chandabai, Seema, Manbhar, Santosh and Balchandibai, were killed after they were struck by lightning while working in the fields at three different places in Balapura, Harnavdashashaji and Deegod-Jagir area, ASI of Harnavdashahaji Police Station, Mohanchand, said.

Five other women, Badambai, Chamoli, Sunita, Mangibai and Kailashbai, also working in the fields, sustained severe burn injuries, he said, adding they were rushed to the government hospital in Aklera where they are undergoing treatment.

Attention

Australia's 50 year polar low: Heavy snow, deluge, storm force winds & massive blackout

South Australia blackout
© ReutersA traffic policeman directs vehicles in the blackout in Adelaide, Australia, on Wednesday.
With the polar low sweeping across Australia , it took down the power grid and dropped heavy snow across the east again. Media claims this to be a once in 50 year event, but its the 2nd once in 50 year and once in 100 year event these last two months. Wind power shut off of 40% of South Australia's power generation is to blame, winds were too strong so they shut them down.


Comment: See also:


Windsock

Hurricane Matthew is strongest Atlantic storm in nine years; 260km/h (160mph) winds, due to hit Jamaica Monday

Hurricane Matthew heads for Jamaica
© ReutersJamaicans have been stocking up on supplies at supermarkets in advance of Hurricane Matthew's arrival
The most powerful hurricane in the Atlantic for nine years is moving towards Jamaica with wind speeds of up to 260km/h (160mph), strong enough to wreck houses.

Weather forecasters have upgraded Hurricane Matthew to category five, the highest on the scale of intensity.

Jamaican PM Andrew Holness has called an urgent meeting of parliament to discuss hurricane preparedness.

The storm is expected to make landfall by Monday.

Jamaica's palm-lined southern coast is expected to be hit first. The capital, Kingston, is located in the area, as is the country's only oil refinery.

Officials have warned the high winds could also batter the island's main tourist areas including Montego Bay in the north.

"The government is on high alert," Mr Holness' director of communications, Robert Morgan, was quoted by Reuters as saying.

Comment: Hurricane Matthew batters southern Caribbean in rare shift


Tornado2

5 waterspouts photographed along St. Joseph Peninsula, Florida

Waterspouts
Saturday morning got a bit crazy for visitors and residents along St. Joseph Peninsula and Black's Island.

A front coming through generated what first appeared to be five funnels over towering over the peninsula becoming a main funnel with a second alongside and finally one main waterspout over St. Joseph Bay, coming within a couple hundreds yards or so of Black's Island.

Thanks for Carol and Phil Dohmen for the photos.

Waterspout

Tornado2

Waterspout filmed off Johnson Beach, Florida

Waterspout
We catch a rare waterspout on video at Johnson Beach. The whole storm was quite a show, with bright lightning every few minutes.


Windsock

South Australia hit by second destructive storm in 24 hours with winds of up to 140km/h

South Australia power outage
© Reuters Police direct traffic in the central business district of Adelaide after severe storms and thousands of lightning strikes knocked out power to the entire state of South Australia on Wednesday night. On Thursday night the state copped another belting.

Intense low-pressure system sweeps across state, causing heavy rain, flooding and major damage after emergency services tell Adelaide workers to go home


South Australia has copped another belting with a destructive storm lashing the state just 24 hours after super cell thunderstorms knocked out the state's entire power network.

The intense low pressure system raged across Adelaide and parts of South Australia late on Thursday. The storm packed winds of up to 140km/h, among the strongest the city has experienced, prompting an unprecedented warning from police for workers to head home early and stay home amid concerns emergency services might not be able to cope.

The winds brought down trees across a wide area, causing major damage, and ripped some mid-north buildings apart.

Heavy rain caused widespread flooding, from the Patawalonga River in Adelaide, through to the Barossa and Clare valleys, which copped 54mm of rain.


Comment: See also:


Cloud Lightning

Record rise in the number of deaths due to lightning in 2016 for Bangladesh

lightning
© 123RF
Bangladesh has witnessed a record rise in the number of deaths from lightning strikes this year, and experts say it is linked to global warming and deforestation.

Until September 20, a total of 193 people were killed in lightning strikes, beating all previous annual figures that ranged from 51 to 136 between 2010 and 2015, according to the Department of Disaster Management.

The total death toll since 2010 is 828. However, the actual number of deaths from lightning strikes could be more as it had not been considered a natural disaster until recently and not recorded by the department, an official told The Daily Star.

The record of people getting injured in lightning strikes is not maintained either.

The government declared lightning as one of the natural disasters only earlier this year, said M Khalid Mahmood, director (planning and development) at the DDM.

The district administration, as per a standing order, provides Tk 20,000 to the families that have lost a member in lightning strike.
Lightning stats

Comment: With these additional reports, here and here, the number of deaths for the year in Bangladesh now stands at 196 and it seems more than likely it will top over 200 by the end of 2016.


Cloud Lightning

Woman, daughter killed by lightning bolt in Rangpur, Bangladesh

lightning
© 123RF
An indigenous woman and her daughter were killed by a lightning strike at Kadirabad in Pirganj upazila of Rangpur early Friday.

The deceased were identified as Lakshmina Murmu, 55, and her daughter Selina Murmu, 20, of the area.

Officer-in-charge of Pirganj Police Station Rezaul Karim said a streak of thunderbolt struck the duo while they were sleeping at their house in the late night, leaving them dead on the spot; according to a news agency.

Source: TM

Windsock

Hurricane Matthew batters southern Caribbean in rare shift

Tropical Storm Matthew
© NOAATropical Storm Matthew (bottom right) spins in the eastern Caribbean Sea on Sept. 29, 2016.
People in the Dutch Caribbean islands reinforced their homes and stocked up on emergency supplies Thursday as Hurricane Matthew took a rare turn through the southern Caribbean ahead of an expected shift to the north.

Matthew was passing to the north of the islands of Aruba, Bonaire and Curacao during the night, before shifting on a course predicted to take it toward Jamaica, Cuba and Haiti over the weekend.

By late Thursday, Aruba was seeing some rain and sea surge had covered part of a road on the northwest side of the island. There were no reports of evacuations. In Curacao, some streets were flooded, and there was a light rain falling on Bonaire.

The so-called "ABC islands" of the Dutch Caribbean, which were under a tropical storm watch, are usually spared from tropical storms. Matthew's approach prompted long lines at gas stations and supermarkets. Authorities in Aruba said government offices would be closed Friday and Curacao's parliamentary elections were postponed until next week.

The government of Colombia also issued a tropical storm watch for its coast from Riohach to the Venezuelan border.

Comment: According to the Weather Channel, Hurricane Matthew became the fifth hurricane of the 2016 Atlantic hurricane season early yesterday afternoon. It is now a Category 2 hurricane that continues to undergo rapid intensification. Matthew poses a danger to Jamaica, parts of Hispañola, eastern Cuba, and the Bahamas early next week. Its potential U.S. impact later next week still remains unclear.

Roy Spencer comments:
Hurricane Matthew, with 105 mph sustained winds, is now over the south-central Caribbean. It is expected to strengthen into a major hurricane today or tomorrow, and possibly make landfall somewhere on the East Coast around next Thursday. If it does, Matthew's landfall would occur exactly 4,000 days after major Hurricane Wilma's landfall.

Hurricane Wilma, the last major hurricane (Cat 3 or stronger) to hit the U.S., struck Florida on October 24, 2005. Will Matthew arrive as the first major hurricane to strike the U.S. in almost 11 years? Only time will tell. (Sandy was Cat 1 at landfall, and technically not a hurricane at that time. Hurricane Ike, 2008, was a Cat 2.)



Tornado2

Incredible video shows 'rare' EF1 tornado ripping through a Utah town

Utah tornado
© LiveLeakA large piece of metal blew across the road seconds before the driver passed by
This incredible video shows buildings being ripped to shreds by a tornado.

The footage, filmed in Layton in Utah, shows debris flying across the road as huge chunks of metal are tossed around by the wind.

The driver who took it narrowly avoided being hit by a metal roof which blew across the road ahead of him.

'Out of nowhere, dark grey clouds rolled in and the tornado winds hit. Just beyond the blown heap of metal, you can see school children crowded behind an SUV with the crossing guard for safety.

'Fortunately, nobody was injured. It took a team of 5 guys to lift the giant pieces of heavy metal.'

The car was forced to dodge fallen trees and branches in the middle of the road, as scraps of building materials were blown across Mr Stimpson's path.


Comment: Two EF1 tornadoes damage homes in Utah