Showing posts with label Delhi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Delhi. Show all posts

Sunday, April 10, 2016

PLANETARY TREMORS: Very Strong 6.6 Magnitude Earthquake Strikes Afghanistan - Strong Tremors Felt In India And Pakistan Capitals! [MAPS + TECTONIC SUMMARY]

USGS earthquake location.

April 10, 2016 - AFGHANISTAN - A powerful earthquake has struck the border area between Afghanistan, Pakistan and India, with tremors felt in Delhi and Islamabad.

The quake was intially measured at magnitude-6.6 and depth 210km by the USGS, though there were no immediate reports of casualties.

Reports from across South Asia described buildings swaying for more than a minute with tremors felt in the Pakistani city of Lahore some 630km from the epicentre.


Pakistani official Arif Ullah said the magnitude-7.1 quake was centered near Afghanistan's border with Tajikistan. Germany's GFZ Research Center for Geosciences set the quake's magnitude at 6.5.


USGS shakemap intensity.


Tremors were also felt in the Indian capital and in Kashmir, witnesses said, with some people working in high-rise buildings in the Indian capital rushing into the streets. The Delhi underground system was also halted briefly, commuters told the NDTV channel.

In Kabul, Omar Mohammadi, a spokesman for the Afghanistan National Disaster Management Authority, said officials were collecting information but no reports of casualties or damage had been received so far. - Independent.



Seismotectonics of the Himalaya and Vicinity

Seismicity in the Himalaya dominantly results from the continental collision of the India and Eurasia plates, which are converging at a relative rate of 40-50 mm/yr. Northward underthrusting of India beneath Eurasia generates numerous earthquakes and consequently makes this area one of the most seismically hazardous regions on Earth. The surface expression of the plate boundary is marked by the foothills of the north-south trending Sulaiman Range in the west, the Indo-Burmese Arc in the east and the east-west trending Himalaya Front in the north of India.

The India-Eurasia plate boundary is a diffuse boundary, which in the region near the north of India, lies within the limits of the Indus-Tsangpo (also called the Yarlung-Zangbo) Suture to the north and the Main Frontal Thrust to the south. The Indus-Tsangpo Suture Zone is located roughly 200 km north of the Himalaya Front and is defined by an exposed ophiolite chain along its southern margin. The narrow (less than 200km) Himalaya Front includes numerous east-west trending, parallel structures. This region has the highest rates of seismicity and largest earthquakes in the Himalaya region, caused mainly by movement on thrust faults. Examples of significant earthquakes, in this densely populated region, caused by reverse slip movement include the 1934 M8.1 Bihar, the 1905 M7.5 Kangra and the 2005 M7.6 Kashmir earthquakes. The latter two resulted in the highest death tolls for Himalaya earthquakes seen to date, together killing over 100,000 people and leaving millions homeless. The largest instrumentally recorded Himalaya earthquake occurred on 15th August 1950 in Assam, eastern India. This M8.6 right-lateral, strike-slip, earthquake was widely felt over a broad area of central Asia, causing extensive damage to villages in the epicentral region.


USGS plate tectonics for the region.

The Tibetan Plateau is situated north of the Himalaya, stretching approximately 1000km north-south and 2500km east-west, and is geologically and tectonically complex with several sutures which are hundreds of kilometer-long and generally trend east-west. The Tibetan Plateau is cut by a number of large (greater than 1000km) east-west trending, left-lateral, strike-slip faults, including the long Kunlun, Haiyuan, and the Altyn Tagh. Right-lateral, strike-slip faults (comparable in size to the left-lateral faults), in this region include the Karakorum, Red River, and Sagaing. Secondary north-south trending normal faults also cut the Tibetan Plateau. Thrust faults are found towards the north and south of the Tibetan Plateau. Collectively, these faults accommodate crustal shortening associated with the ongoing collision of the India and Eurasia plates, with thrust faults accommodating north south compression, and normal and strike-slip accommodating east-west extension.

Along the western margin of the Tibetan Plateau, in the vicinity of south-eastern Afghanistan and western Pakistan, the India plate translates obliquely relative to the Eurasia plate, resulting in a complex fold-and-thrust belt known as the Sulaiman Range. Faulting in this region includes strike-slip, reverse-slip and oblique-slip motion and often results in shallow, destructive earthquakes. The active, left-lateral, strike-slip Chaman fault is the fastest moving fault in the region. In 1505, a segment of the Chaman fault near Kabul, Afghanistan, ruptured causing widespread destruction. In the same region the more recent 30 May 1935, M7.6 Quetta earthquake, which occurred in the Sulaiman Range in Pakistan, killed between 30,000 and 60,000 people.

On the north-western side of the Tibetan Plateau, beneath the Pamir-Hindu Kush Mountains of northern Afghanistan, earthquakes occur at depths as great as 200 km as a result of remnant lithospheric subduction. The curved arc of deep earthquakes found in the Hindu Kush Pamir region indicates the presence of a lithospheric body at depth, thought to be remnants of a subducting slab. Cross-sections through the Hindu Kush region suggest a near vertical northerly-dipping subducting slab, whereas cross-sections through the nearby Pamir region to the east indicate a much shallower dipping, southerly subducting slab. Some models suggest the presence of two subduction zones; with the Indian plate being subducted beneath the Hindu Kush region and the Eurasian plate being subducted beneath the Pamir region. However, other models suggest that just one of the two plates is being subducted and that the slab has become contorted and overturned in places.

Shallow crustal earthquakes also occur in this region near the Main Pamir Thrust and other active Quaternary faults. The Main Pamir Thrust, north of the Pamir Mountains, is an active shortening structure. The northern portion of the Main Pamir Thrust produces many shallow earthquakes, whereas its western and eastern borders display a combination of thrust and strike-slip mechanisms. On the 18 February 1911, the M7.4 Sarez earthquake ruptured in the Central Pamir Mountains, killing numerous people and triggering a landside, which blocked the Murghab River.

Further north, the Tian Shan is a seismically active intra-continental mountain belt, which extends 2500 km in an ENE-WNW orientation north of the Tarim Basin. This belt is defined by numerous east-west trending thrust faults, creating a compressional basin and range landscape. It is generally thought that regional stresses associated with the collision of the India and Eurasia plates are responsible for faulting in the region. The region has had three major earthquakes (greater than M7.6) at the start of the 20th Century, including the 1902 Atushi earthquake, which killed an estimated 5,000 people. The range is cut through in the west by the 700-km-long, northwest-southeast striking, Talas-Ferghana active right-lateral, strike-slip fault system. Though the system has produced no major earthquakes in the last 250 years, paleo-seismic studies indicate that it has the potential to produce M7.0+ earthquakes and it is thought to represent a significant hazard.

The northern portion of the Tibetan Plateau itself is largely dominated by the motion on three large left-lateral, strike-slip fault systems; the Altyn Tagh, Kunlun and Haiyuan. The Altyn Tagh fault is the longest of these strike slip faults and it is thought to accommodate a significant portion of plate convergence. However, this system has not experienced significant historical earthquakes, though paleoseismic studies show evidence of prehistoric M7.0-8.0 events. Thrust faults link with the Altyn Tagh at its eastern and western termini. The Kunlun Fault, south of the Altyn Tagh, is seismically active, producing large earthquakes such as the 8th November 1997, M7.6 Manyi earthquake and the 14th November 2001, M7.8 Kokoxili earthquake. The Haiyuan Fault, in the far north-east, generated the 16 December 1920, M7.8 earthquake that killed approximately 200,000 people and the 22 May 1927 M7.6 earthquake that killed 40,912.

The Longmen Shan thrust belt, along the eastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau, is an important structural feature and forms a transitional zone between the complexly deformed Songpan-Garze Fold Belt and the relatively undeformed Sichuan Basin. On 12 May 2008, the thrust belt produced the reverse slip, M7.9 Wenchuan earthquake, killing over 87,000 people and causing billions of US dollars in damages and landslides which dammed several rivers and lakes.

Southeast of the Tibetan Plateau are the right-lateral, strike-slip Red River and the left-lateral, strike-slip Xiangshuihe-Xiaojiang fault systems. The Red River Fault experienced large scale, left-lateral ductile shear during the Tertiary period before changing to its present day right-lateral slip rate of approximately 5 mm/yr. This fault has produced several earthquakes greater than M6.0 including the 4 January 1970, M7.5 earthquake in Tonghai which killed over 10,000 people. Since the start of the 20th century, the Xiangshuihe-Xiaojiang Fault system has generated several M7.0+ earthquakes including the M7.5 Luhuo earthquake which ruptured on the 22 April 1973. Some studies suggest that due to the high slip rate on this fault, future large earthquakes are highly possible along the 65km stretch between Daofu and Qianning and the 135km stretch that runs through Kangding.

Shallow earthquakes within the Indo-Burmese Arc, predominantly occur on a combination of strike-slip and reverse faults, including the Sagaing, Kabaw and Dauki faults. Between 1930 and 1956, six M7.0+ earthquakes occurred near the right-lateral Sagaing Fault, resulting in severe damage in Myanmar including the generation of landslides, liquefaction and the loss of 610 lives. Deep earthquakes (200km) have also been known to occur in this region, these are thought to be due to the subduction of the eastwards dipping, India plate, though whether subduction is currently active is debated. Within the pre-instrumental period, the large Shillong earthquake occurred on the 12 June 1897, causing widespread destruction. - USGS.




Sunday, March 13, 2016

EXTREME WEATHER: Massive Dust Storm With Strong Winds Lash Delhi, India - Leading To Trees Falling, Damaged Vehicles And Traffic Disruptions! [PHOTOS]

© Gulf Times

March 13, 2016 - INDIA - A massive dust storm accompanied by strong winds lashed Delhi on Saturday evening leading to trees falling in some areas and disrupting traffic in several parts of west and south Delhi.

The dust storm, which came after showers in the morning in the city, was again followed by rain as well as hail in some parts of Delhi. However the minimum and maximum temperatures remained above average.

Traffic police officials said they received calls about falling of trees in Rohini and Pitampura in north Delhi, which led to congestion on roads. Some vehicles were also damaged when the falling trees fell on them. The dust storm resulted in traffic snarls between 4 p.m. to 7.30 pm in many parts of west Delhi including Azadpur, Jahangirpuri and Punjabi Bagh. In south Delhi, the affected areas included Moti Nagar and Vasant Vihar.


© Vishwa Gujarat

Twitter: Shikha Gautam

Commuters tweeted about the dust storm. "Delhi, this is one big storm coming. Get yourself in people," Shikha Gautam tweeted. "Heavy rain and hail storm in Delhi, leads traffic chaos," Arpit Pal said. Weather officials said that the dust storm had come due to western disturbances and such conditions are expected to last till Monday. Power cuts were also reported from many parts of the city. The Met office said that the maximum temperature was recorded at 31 degrees Celsius, one notch above the season's average. "Sunday morning will start with mist and haze while generally cloudy sky, thunderstorm with rain is very likely to occur towards afternoon and evening," said an official of the India Meteorological Department (IMD) said.

The maximum and minimum temperatures on Sunday are likely to hover around 27 and 15 degrees Celsius respectively.

Saturday's minimum temperature was 18.5 degrees Celsius, three notches above the season's average, while the minimum and maximum humidity ranged between 53 and 96 percent.

The IMD official said that the national capital received 9.1 mm rainfall by 8.30 a.m. on Saturday. Showers again lashed the city in the evening.

Friday's minimum temperature was recorded at 19 degrees Celsius, five notches above the season's average while the maximum was 33.5 degrees Celsius, four notches above the average. - Mid-Day.








 

Friday, February 19, 2016

OMEN: Plagues And Pestilences - Girl Born With Three Legs In Delhi, India?!

Varsha Sena, two, was born with an extra leg sprouting from her back due to a rare condition which affects one in a million infants

February 19, 2016 - DELHI, INDIA - A baby girl has been born with an extra leg sprouting from her back due to a rare condition which affects one in a million infants.

Two-year-old Varsha Sena, from Delhi, was born with two legs, and a third limb growing sideways out of her spine.

Varsha suffers from a rare condition called polymelia, which causes a person to be born with extra limbs, often arms or legs.

Doctors at the Govind Ballabh Pant Hospital, Delhi, were able to successfully amputate the unwanted third leg at the end of last month. The lead surgeon, Dr Daljit Singh, said: 'The baby was suffering from polymelia.

'It is a condition in which is a person is born with more than four limbs. We have not seen such a case in the last fifty years.

'This was the first case of polymelia in which the spinal cord had developed into an additional limb.'

Varsha was born at Bara Hindu Rao Hospital in Delhi in 2014, and was later sent to the Govind Ballabh Pant Hospital for surgery to remove her extra leg.

After seeing her baby for the first time, her mother, Komal Sena, 24, said she was scared of her child.

She said: 'I was scared when I saw my daughter for the first time.' The family calls Varsha by the name of 'Ganesh' - a Hindu God with and elephant head who is normally depicted with four legs - due to her extra limbs.


Varsha suffers from a rare condition called polymelia, which causes a person to be born with extra limbs, often arms or legs.
She had an extra limb growing sideways out of the left side of her back

'This was the first case of polymelia in which the spinal cord had developed into an additional limb,' said surgeon Dr Daljit Singh.
Pictured is an X-ray of Versha's extra leg

The rare disorder occurs in the womb when the cells form abnormally during embryonic development.

The embryo begins to develop as conjoined twins. But one twin stops growing, leaving the remaining developments - often limbs - of the undeveloped twin attached to the body of the live baby.

There are very few known cases of polymelia around the world.

In 2014 MailOnline reported on the case of another Indian boy, from Gujarat, who was born with three arms.

His right arm in the normal place, but two arms on his left side, and doctors at Ahmedabad Civil Hospital were able to remove the extra limb.

In 2012 MailOnline reported on a newborn girl from Pakistan who was born with a third arm due to polymelia.

The extra arm was joined to her back near her spinal cord.

At just four years old the baby girl, who was from the Dera Ghazi Khan District in the Punjab province of Pakistan, underwent an operation to remove the extra arm.

The most well known case of the condition was Lakshmi Tatma, from India, who was born with eight limbs.

A parasitic twin who had stopped developing and died in the womb was attached to her body.

Doctors removed the extra limbs in 2007.  - Daily Mail.






Wednesday, March 11, 2015

PLAGUES & PESTILENCES: Swine Flu Death Toll Reaches 1,482 In India - OVER 26,000 AFFECTED!


March 11, 2015 - INDIA
- The swine flu toll in India has swelled to 1,482 while the number of affected persons crossed the 26,000-mark on Tuesday. A minister in the Rajasthan government has also tested positive for the disease.

The Union Health Ministry said that, as on March 9, the total number of deaths due to the H1N1 virus stands at 1,482 with as many as 26,455 people having been affected by the disease across the various states, PTI reported.

Rajasthan Food and Civil Supplies Minister Hem Singh Bhadana tested positive for swine flu and is undergoing treatment. His sample was sent from Alwar on Sunday and health officials confirmed that he has been infected with the virus.

Health Ministry data showed that the toll due to the disease was highest in Gujarat where 347 people have died while the number of affected persons was 5,715.

The disease has claimed 343 lives in Rajasthan, whose total of 6,030 patients is the highest so far in the country.

The toll stands at 221 while a total of 2,703 persons have come down with the disease in Maharashtra, where Bombay High Court on Tuesday directed the state government to file an affidavit within four weeks on the measures it has taken to tackle the cases of swine flu.

Madhya Pradesh has seen 201 deaths and registered 1,608 cases of the disease.

Meanwhile, Health Ministry officials said that the figure on Tuesday also includes the deaths which occurred in Delhi this year of people belonging to various other states. These figures have been updated in the cumulative total in the ministry's data, officials said. - India Today.


Thursday, January 8, 2015

ICE AGE NOW: Mini-Ice Age 2015-2035 - 125-Year Cold Record In Hawaii And Cold Wave Continues Unabated In India, Taj Mahal Stone Tiles Too Cold To Walk On!



January 8, 2015 - EARTH
- India's cold wave continues unabated in Uttar Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh, Rajasthan. For cold circle red Bihar reels under cold wave. Fatehpur shivers at –2°C. Jamu and Kashmir's harshest winter period begins. This is the coldest December in Delhi in the last 11 years.

JAIPUR: The cold conditions continued in the state on Sunday when a dip of 6 to 7 notches in the minimum temperatures was recorded. Fatehpur in Churu remained coldest in the state where a minimum temperature of minus 2 degrees Celsius was recorded.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/ci...

The district agriculture department said that for the wheat crop the fall in temperature was beneficial but there were apprehensions about the potato crop, which cannot stand such a steep decline in temperature.

People stopped walking barefoot on the grounds because it is too cold at the Taj Mahal http://post.jagran.com/footfall-at-ta...
http://articles.economictimes.indiati...

Mt Sinabung Eruption
The 8,000ft volcano, in North Sumatra, has proven to be deadly since it erupted in 2010 after being dormant for an estimated 400 years
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/tra...

Duluth Ski Resorts close because its too cold. http://www.startribune.com/local/2874...
School closing http://www.startribune.com/local/minn...
http://www.startribune.com/local/2877...

Hawaii coldest temperatures http://www.staradvertiser.com/news/br...
Hawaii 2nd time freezing http://www.ibtimes.com/even-hawaii-ha...
Hawaii Blizzard Dec 25th http://www.accuweather.com/en/weather...
http://heavy.com/news/2014/12/hawaii-...
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Natu...

Coldest Fort Collins
http://stevengoddard.wordpress.com/20...
https://www.timeanddate.com/weather/u...
http://www.wrcc.dri.edu/cgi-bin/cliMA...


WATCH: Global cooling trend continues in India, Hawaii and other areas across the planet.




 - Adapt 2030.



Wednesday, December 31, 2014

ICE AGE NOW: Death Toll Exceeds 150 In India Cold Wave - Dense Fog And Low Visibility Leads To Widespread Transportation Disruptions!



December 31, 2014 - INDIA
- More than 150 people have died in a cold wave sweeping across northern and eastern India and dense fog disrupted air and rail services, reports said on Tuesday.


Sixteen more people died in intense cold or fog-related accidents in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh on Monday, taking the region's death toll for the month to 140, the Times of India said.

Temperatures reached a low of 0.5 degrees Celsius in the state's Sonbhadra district.


Twelve more cold-related deaths were reported from the eastern state of Bihar, national capital Delhi and neighbouring Haryana state, reports said.

Thick fog at the Delhi airport led to delays of about 100 flights and cancellations of 16 more, broadcaster NDTV reported. About 100 trains were running late due to low visibility.

Winters in India are brief, beginning in December and ending by February, but cause many deaths in the country that is better prepared for its long, hot summers.

Weather bureau officials say cold weather is likely to persist over the next few weeks in most of the northern regions. - News24.



Tuesday, June 10, 2014

EARTH CHANGES: Monumental Signs Of The Times - Huge Hail Pelts Paris As Severe Thunderstorms Erupt Across Western Europe; Brazil Floods Kill Nine; Temperatures Rise To 47.8 Celsius In Delhi, India, The Highest In 62 Years; Everglades Brush Fire Burns Over 20,000 Acres, Covering South Florida In Smoke; Raging Storm In Western Germany Kills Five And Disrupts Transportation; Unexpected Summer Blizzard Leaves Ride The Rockies Cyclists Stranded At Top Of Pass; And Severe Storms Target Cincinnati, Nashville Tuesday! [PHOTOS+MAP+VIDEOS]

June 10, 2014 - EARTH - The following stories constitutes some of the latest incidents of Earth changes across the globe.

Huge Hail Pelts Paris As Severe Thunderstorms Erupt Across Western Europe


It's not just the U.S. that has suffered a damaging onslaught of massive, wind-driven hails lately. On Sunday and Monday, powerful thunderstorms erupted across France and Belgium, dropping baseball to tennis-ball-sized hail near Brussels as well as the French countryside. Hail also fell in Paris overnight Sunday. These hailstones formed inside massive supercell thunderstorms, which are long-lived storms that feature rotating updrafts, which allows them to produce large hail, damaging winds, and in some cases, tornadoes.

While thunderstorms are typical in France during the summer, this storm outbreak has produced unusually large hail for the region, and it has hit Paris particularly hard.

As of Monday evening in France, Meteo France had posted an "Orange Alert" across west-central and northern parts of the country, with the threat of severe weather stretching northeastward into Belgium and the Netherlands. Meteo France is urging people to take "special vigilance" as the country faces yet another stormy night.


Visible satellite photo centered on France, showing bright white clusters of thunderstorms
across northwest France and Belgium.

In this June 7, 2014, photo, Belgium's and Tunisia's team take shelter during a hail storm during a friendly
soccer match at the King Baudouin stadium in Brussels. Image: Yves Logghe/Associated Pres

We're accustomed to avoiding thunderstorms on the way to JNB...but not normally during the climb, north of Paris!
@rhys_parker

Current view of the monster supercell over Paris, France! @reedtimmerTVN 
@severeweatherEU

Very unusual France hail RT @severeweatherEU MONSTER HAIL from Loiret France an hour ago-8-10cm diameter!!
@KellyHereid

The storm outbreak began on June 7, when a pre-World Cup soccer match between Belgium and Tunisia was halted in the first half due to accumulating golf ball-sized hail. Numerous hail and lightning images and videos were shared via social media during the past few days.

The severe thunderstorms have been forming along the edge of an area of high pressure that has brought an early season heat wave to much of western Europe, with high temperatures in the low-to-mid-90s Fahrenheit in Germany, for example. - Mashable.


Brazil Floods Kill Nine
Goalposts stand in a soccer field flooded by the waters of the Paraguay River in Asuncion on May 30, 2014.
Photo: Reuters

Flooding caused by torrential rains over the weekend has killed at least nine people and left three missing in southern Brazil, officials said Monday, declaring an emergency in 77 towns.

The flood-hit areas include the state of Parana, whose capital, Curitiba, is one of the 12 host cities for the World Cup, which opens Thursday.

The worst-affected areas however are located around 300 kilometers (185 miles) from Curitiba.

More than 55,000 people's homes were flooded in the 77 towns where Parana Governor Beto Richa declared a state of emergency.

Richa announced six million reais ($2.6 million) in emergency aid to help victims and to restore water and electricity supplies.

President Dilma Rousseff promised via Twitter to get "all necessary support" to victims.

The celebrated Iguazu waterfalls, some of the largest in the world, saw 30 times their normal volume Monday because of the rains -- 47.5 million liters (12.5 million gallons) per second, said state power company Copel.

The national park around the falls, which border Argentina, has closed footbridges and suspended boat tours for safety reasons.

In the neighboring state of Santa Catarina, 24 cities were flooded and at least 16,000 people affected.

The Itajai Acu river was 10 meters (33 feet) higher than normal, and nine roads were closed.

And in Rio Grande do Sul state, the rains caused a 70-meter road cave-in that swallowed two cars. The passengers escaped with light injuries, news website G1 reported.

Agence France-Presse


Global Post.


Temperatures Rise To 47.8C In Delhi, India, The Highest In 62 Years
Youngsters beat the heat as mercury soars in New Delhi on Sunday.
Photo: PTI

Temperature in the Capital touched 45.1 degree Celsius on Sunday while it was 47.8 degree C in and around Palam airport making it the hottest day in 62 years giving no respite to people reeling under a blistering heat wave.

Adding to the woes of heat-ravaged Delhiites, frequent power cuts across the city aggravated the situation and made life miserable.

The Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) said there is no relief likely from the heat wave on Monday and similar weather conditions will continue.

"Instead, the maximum temperature will continue to hover around 45 degree Celsius on Monday as well," the IMD official said, adding, "there will be mainly clear sky".

The maximum temperature of 45.1 degree C in the capital was five degree above normal and it was the hottest in five years. Yesterday, the mercury touched 44.9 degree C.

The minimum temperature stood at 28.6 degree C, a notch above the season's average. On Monday, minimum temperature will hover around 30 degree C, the IMD said.

Similar situation prevailed in Palam where the maximum temperature was 47.8 degrees Celsius, the highest since 1952, the IMD department said. The minimum was 30.8 degree C.

Temperature in the national capital breached the 45 degree Celsius mark on June 6, making it the hottest day of the season. - India Today.


Everglades Brush Fire Burns Over 20,000 Acres, Covering South Florida In Smoke


People just waking up didn't know what to make of the strange haze hanging in the sky. Was it fog? Was a nearby building on fire? Was it a Miami Heat hangover?

For hours on Monday morning, the surreal scene covered much of South Florida, cutting visibility in some places to a mile or two, obliterating parts of the skyline, closing a major road, forcing a health advisory, and sending first-day summer campers indoors.

The smoke came from a huge Everglades brush fire in West Broward, which burned nearly 20,000 acres, according to the Florida Forest Service.

Less smoke wafted into the suburbs and along the coast Tuesday morning, although the fire continued to burn.


WATCH: Forestry workers trying to contain everglades brush fire.




Now, the big question: Will it be back?

Could be, depending on the direction of the winds and whether the smoke stays low to the ground.

"If rain comes, that would be a big help," Florida Forest Service spokesman Scott Peterich said.

And the rain could come. Forecasters expect a wet week with a rain chance of 30 to 40 percent and likely thunderstorms.

The West Broward fire was started Saturday night from a lightning strike. By Monday morning, the smoke blanketed downtown Miami, Doral, Hialeah, Homestead, Davie, Cooper City - almost everywhere people live.

Drivers found ash on their cars in suburbs close to the fire zone. Those with respiratory issues were told to stay indoors. Commuters were instructed to use caution.

"It's been many years that I have seen smoke this thick in the urban areas due to wildfires," Peterich said.

The fire also closed northbound U.S. 27 at Interstate 75. The road reopened about 9 Monday morning after being shut down for nearly 24 hours.

Florida Highway Patrol spokesman Sgt. Mark Wysocky said "visibility had improved," but the department was "monitoring the situation."

"If we need to shut down again, we will," he said.

By Monday, when a plane surveyed the area, the fire had spread to about 19,500 acres. Peterich said sawgrass burns quickly and that firefighters are letting the blaze run its course. Two Forest Service trucks are monitoring the flames and will intervene if the fire approaches levies and canals, which can threaten other parts of the Glades.

Peterich said that a combination of variable winds and low dispersion - which means the smoke stays low to the ground - caused all the haziness. By late afternoon, it appeared the smoke was rising.

The haze and odor put an early damper on the first day of summer camp for children across South Florida on Monday.

Camp managers were advised to keep children indoors. At Westwind Lakes Park, summer campers spent their morning out of the smoke, said Terry Vilorio, the Miami park recreational summer camp leader.

"Most of the kids still wanted to go outside but we played games indoors instead," she said.

Chuck Caracozza, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Miami-Dade, said thick smoke could return overnight if the winds die down.

"We might see much of the same," he said of the necessity to issue a dense smoke advisory Monday morning.

A sea breeze from the southeast helped push smoke out of South Florida by Monday afternoon.

The National Weather Service expects Tuesday to be mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms in the afternoon.

Meanwhile, everyone is still being told to stay inside as much as possible until the smoke dissipates. The Broward Health Department on Monday put out a warning to take "precautions during this period of increased air pollution levels due to wildfires."

"Smoke from wildfires may cause coughing, a scratchy throat, irritated sinuses, shortness of breath, chest pain, headaches, stinging eyes and a runny nose," the department warned. - Miami Herald.


Raging Storm In Western Germany Kills Five And Disrupts Transportation
In the town Gelsenkirchen clean up has started after the storm on Monday. Caroline Seidel/AP

At least five people were killed in violent storms that swept Germany's most populous state late on Monday, felling trees, disrupting public transport and leaving some roads impassable.

After a scorchingly hot three-day holiday weekend, thunderstorms, strong winds and heavy rain pounded the western state of North-Rhine Westphalia, causing Germany's third-largest airport in Duesseldorf to close for about an hour.

Three people were reported to have died in the state capital when a tree fell onto a garden shed in which they were seeking shelter. Fire fighters rescued three more injured people - two severely hurt - from the shed, according to media.

A cyclist aged around 50 died in nearby Cologne after being hit by a falling tree that local police said was probably struck by lightning. Another person died in the town of Essen while trying to clear a street.


Image: AccuWeather

Ten incoming flights at Duesseldorf airport were diverted while 10 other flights were cancelled. The airport said gusts of up to 150 kilometres an hour (93 mph) were recorded. It opened again at 10 p.m. local time (2000 GMT).

Early on Tuesday, national rail operator Deutsche Bahn said numerous train services were still suspended and trains in operation would face severe delays.

Fallen trees blocked some streets in Duesseldorf, where trams and underground trains were also stopped due to damaged overhead lines. Some locals reported electrical outages.

The storm front moved further northeast and the German Meteorological Service issued weather warnings for regions including Hanover and Bremen for the night.

(Additional reporting by Thomas Seythal in Berlin; Writing by Michelle Martin and Annika Breidthardt; Editing by Gareth Jones)

Reuters.


Unexpected Summer Blizzard Leaves Ride The Rockies Cyclists Stranded At Top Of Pass
Warming hut is jam packed.
@mossland
An unexpected summer blizzard blew into Grand County Sunday, leaving hundreds of bicyclist stranded at the top of Berthoud Pass.

According to the Grand County Office of Emergency Management, snow fell heavily at the top of the pass on cyclists participating in the annual Ride the Rockies bike tour.

The snowy conditions stranded hundreds of riders at the top of the pass. By 5 p.m., the weather at Berthoud Pass was 34 degrees with 15 mph winds and light snow, the Grand County Sheriff’s Office said.

Multiple county agencies, including Grand County Emergency Medical, Clear Creek Emergency Medical, Fraser Winter Park Police and the Grand County Sheriff’s Office, responded to get the cyclists out of the cold.


Hundreds of riders board buses in Empire to be taken out of the snow to Fraser
@GrandCountyOEM

The Ryder Bus Company from Winter Park assisted by supplying six buses to transport the estimated 200 cyclists, deputies said.

Some bikers were transported to Clear Creek County and others were transported to Grand County.

In an official statement, Ride the Rockies said the bike tour was ended at 4 p.m. Sunday to ensure the safety of its participants.


WATCH: Blizzard leaves Ride the Rockies cyclists stranded at top of pass.




“As we all know, Colorado weather is unpredictable,” the organization said. “To all of our participants and sponsors, we recognize your dedication to Ride The Rockies as we look forward to the remainder of the tour as planned.

We anticipate a great week of riding with you all, and ask for your continued patience as we focus on ensuring the safety of RTR participants.” - KDVR.


Severe Storms Target Cincinnati, Nashville Tuesday
Image: AccuWeather


The threat of severe thunderstorms will shift east on Tuesday, focusing over the lower Mississippi and Tennessee valleys.

Cincinnati; Louisville and Paducah, Kentucky; Nashville and Memphis, Tennessee; Jackson, Mississippi; Birmingham, Alabama; and Baton Rouge, Louisiana, are a few locations that are in the path of severe storms through Tuesday evening.

Damaging wind gusts will be one of the main threats as storms track eastward across the region with gusts strong enough to bring down trees and power lines, resulting in localized power outages.

Torrential downpours will be the other major impact from these thunderstorms as heavy rain can cause flash flooding.

Water that pools on roadways during these downpours can make it difficult to drive and increase the risk of hydroplaning and being involved in a weather-related accident.

In extreme cases, roadways may become completely flooded and impassable.

If you are driving and come across a flooded road, you should avoid driving through the water and find another route to get to your destination. Turn around, don't drown.

In addition to flooding downpours and damaging wind gusts, there is also the possibility for a few brief tornadoes spinning up.

Northeastern Mississippi and northwestern Alabama are the areas at greatest risk of having a twister spin up; however, they are not expected to be large, long-lived tornadoes.

Looking ahead to the middle of the week, a few showers and thunderstorms are forecast to linger around the area.

However, the threat for severe thunderstorms will shift north towards the Ohio Valley.

Storms on Wednesday could deliver gusty winds, as well as hail to Buffalo, New York; Pittsburg and Erie, Pennsylvania; and Charleston, West Virginia. - AccuWeather.



Wednesday, May 21, 2014

PLANETARY TREMORS: Strong Magnitude 6.0 Earthquake Hits The Bay Of Bengal - Tremors Felt In East India, Delhi, And Chennai! [MAPS+TECTONIC SUMMARY]

May 21, 2014 - BAY OF BENGAL & THE ANDAMAN SEA BASIN - Mild to moderate tremors were felt in northern and eastern India on Wednesday night.


USGS earthquake location map.

Tremors were felt in places like Kolkata, Bhubaneshwar, Ranchi, Gaya and Chennai.

In Chennai tremors were felt in parts of Nungambakkam, Porur and Triplicane, according to some reports.

Tremors were also felt in Delhi and NCR.

The epicentre of earthquake was in Bay of Bengal, 275 km South-East of Paradip Garh. Its magnitude was 6:0 on the Richter scale and depth was 10 km, as per India Meterological Department.

The tremors struck around 9:52 pm.


USGS earthquake shakemap intensity


The tremor was felt for a few seconds in many areas of Odisha, including state capital Bhubaneshwar but it was enough to trigger panic among people who immediately moved out of buildings, PTI reported.

Panic also gripped several parts of Odisha's Kendrapara district where residents felt the tremors for about 10 seconds.

No reports of damage to human life and property has been reported as yet.  - ZEE News.


Tectonic Setting and Seismotectonic History of the Andaman Sea Basin.
The Andaman Sea is a highly folded and spreading geosynclinal basin, about 650 km wide from east to west and about 1200 km long from north to south. Its total area is estimated to be 600,000 to 800,000 km2.

The Andamans and the Nicobars are a group of 349 islands - summits of a submarine mountain range situated on the western side of the basin, formed by tectonic interactions. The present configuration resulted about 26 million years ago. The islands are the boundary separating the Andaman Sea basin from the Indian Ocean. The Andaman group has a total of 325 islands, while the Nicobar group has 24 islands. Only 38 of these islands are inhabited.

Tectonic Setting - The Andaman Sea Basin, is a seismically active region at the southeastern end of the Alpine-Himalayan belt,. For millions of years the India tectonic plate has moved in a north/northeast direction, colliding with the Eurasian tectonic plate. The Indian plate's eastern boundary, along the Andaman and Nicobar islands and Northern Sumatra, is a diffuse zone of seismicity and deformation, characterized by extensive faulting and numerous large shallow and intermediate earthquakes.

The Burma microplate encompasses the northwest portion of the island of Sumatra, as well as the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Further to the east of the Andaman and Nicobar islands, a divergent boundary separates the Burma plate from the Sunda plate.

Seismotectonic History - The seimotectonic history of the region is extensively covered in the scientific literature (Sinvhal et al.1978, Verma et al. 1978). More recent research documents the following regional tectonic evolution. Accordingly, an extensional feature developed along a leaky transform segment of the megashear zone - the Andaman fault - between the Indo-Australian domain and the Sunda-Indochina block (Uyeda and Kanamori, 1979; Taylor and Karner, 1983). This old shear zone acted as a western strike slip guide for the extrusion of the Indochina block about 50-20 My (Tapponnier et al., 1986) - and in response to the indentation of the Indian tectonic plate into Eurasian block.

Collision of Indochina with the Sunda and Australian blocks stopped this crustal extrusion process. Subsequently, the Andaman fault system - recently prolonged through the Sumatra zone (the Sumatra fault) - reactivated due to the lateral escape of the Sumatra forearc sliver plate and as a result of the oblique convergence and subduction with the Indo-Australian plate.

The Indian plate's oblique subduction beneath the Burmese Microplate has created the Andaman segment of the great Sunda Trench. The Andaman and Nicobar Islands are located within the tectonic sliver near the boundary of the Indian plate and the Burmese Microplate. Similarly the oblique subduction has created the north-south trending West Andaman fault - another strike-slip fault system in the Andaman Sea to the east of the island chain.

The Volcanic Arc - The subduction process has also formed a volcanic arc. There are two known volcanoes along this arc. The one in the North is known as the Barren Island Volcano - considered active as it has erupted within recent times. The other is known as the Narcondum volcano and is considered dormant.

Seismicity of the Region - Shallow and occasional intermediate-depth earthquakes delineate the subducted slab under the Andaman-Nicobar islands joining the seismicity trend of the Indo-Burman ranges. The active seismicity of the Andaman Sea Basin, has caused many minor and intermediate earthquakes, a few major events ,and only one known earthquake with magnitude greater than 8. According to the literature (Bapat 1982) from 1900 to 1980, a total of 348 earthquakes were recorded in the area bounded by 7.0 N to 22.0 N and 88.0 E to 100 E. - Dr. George P.C.


Thursday, November 14, 2013

PLANETARY TREMORS: Indian Capital Delhi Shaken By Four Earthquakes Within 3 Hours!

November 14, 2013 - INDIA - Four earthquakes have shaken homes in the Indian capital, Delhi, sending people running into the streets.

India's meteorological department said the first tremor measured magnitude 3.1 and was centred near a neighbourhood in south Delhi.


The Indian capital, Delhi, is close to several fault lines.


This was followed by three more tremors measuring 3.3, 2.5 and 2.8 magnitude over an hour in the capital and its suburbs of Noida and Ghaziabad.

No damage or casualties have been reported in Delhi or the suburbs.

The first quake hit at 12:41 (18:30 GMT), India's meteorological department said.

Reports say several people ran out of their homes after the tremors.

"This must be the strongest earthquake tremor I have ever felt. It was like earth shivering," a Delhi resident with the Twitter handle @DilliDurAst tweeted.

Others like S Irfan Habib tweeted that "despite being awake till 0100 never felt the earthquake shocks in Delhi. May be low intensity and central Delhi was away from its centre."

Delhi is close to several fault lines and held a major earthquake drill last year. - BBC.



Monday, June 17, 2013

PLAGUES & PESTILENCES: Swine Flu Spreads In India - 4,783 Tested Positive; 293 Deaths!

June 17, 2013 - INDIA - Rajasthanreported second highest number of swine flu deaths this year. Highest deaths were reported in Gujarat.




According to the figures of the health ministry, swine flu claimed 161 lives in the beginning of the year in the state. In Gujarat, 194 persons died of swine flu.

Moreover, the state stands third in swine flu cases. Delhi reported the highest number of cases (1,503), followed by Gujarat (1025) and Rajasthan (842) during January 1 and May 26.

Nationally, 4,783 persons tested positive for the disease while 593 died due to it.

Delhi, despite reporting the highest number of swine flu cases, reported only 16 deaths. While Gujarat and Rajasthan reported a higher number of swine flu deaths comparatively.

Despite a change in the temperature, flu cases get reported off and on. While on May 30 one person died in Baran district.

From April 1 to May 30, as many as 38 cases of swine flu were detected in state, of whom 14 died. - Times of India.




Wednesday, May 8, 2013

EXTREME WEATHER: Severe Heat Wave Across North India - Temperatures Up To 45 Degrees And Summer's Just Setting In?!

May 08, 2013 - INDIA - India Meteorological Department (IMD) has said that Rajasthan has been the hottest this season, with Churu recording a maximum of 45 degrees Celsius. Meanwhile, Delhi also hit 44 degrees on May 5.


© IBN Live.

It is not going to get much cooler either, the Met department said that this is normal for summer with temperatures in Delhi to hover between 41 and 42 degrees Celsius.

Uttar Pradesh is also facing the heat with the likelihood of a heat wave in the coming five to six days. Allahabad recorded temperatures of 44 degrees Celsius which is the maximum.

The Met department said that this is slightly above normal but not yet a heat wave.


WATCH: Heat wave across North India, IMD says the summer's just settting in.





IMD official M Duraiswamy said, "The temperatures have gone upto three degrees above normal in most regions.

Uttar Pradesh is right now the hottest in North India. Within a week East UP is likely to experience heat wave." - IBN Live.






Thursday, January 3, 2013

ICE AGE NOW: Global Cooling Across The World - More Than 100 Dead As Cold Snap Hits India!

January 03, 2013 - INDIA - Police say more than 100 people have died of exposure as northern India deals with historically cold temperatures.

Police say more than 100 people, many homeless or poor, have died as a cold snap hits India. AAP.
Police spokesman Surendra Srivastava said on Thursday at least 114 people have died from the cold in the state of Uttar Pradesh, at least 23 of them in the previous 24 hours.

Srivastava said many of the dead were poor people whose bodies were found on footpaths or in parks.

The weather department said temperatures in the state were 4 to 10 degrees below normal.

Temperatures in New Delhi, which borders Uttar Pradesh, hit a high on Wednesday of 9.8 degrees Celsius, the lowest maximum temperature in the capital since 1969. - Herald Sun.

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

ICE AGE NOW: Global Cooling Across The World - North India Shivers In Extreme Cold!

January 02, 2013 - INDIA - North India shivered due to extreme cold on Tuesday as minimum temperatures plummeted across the region. Delhi ushered in the New Year amid extreme cold and dense fog with mercury plummeting to the season's lowest of four degree Celsius.

Delhi ushered in the New Year amid extreme cold and dense fog with mercury plummeting to
the season's lowest of four degree Celsius.
Today's minimum was three degree Celsius below normal and down from the previous day's minimum of 5.5 degrees, which was the previous lowest for the season. Yesterday, the maximum was recorded at 13.3 degree Celsius, making it the coldest day. The maximum temperature in Delhi was 15.3 degrees celsius, five notches below normal. Mercury plummeted in parts of Rajasthan with Churu recording a freezing minimum of 0.7 degree Celsius. Pilani recorded a low of 1.4 degrees while Sriganganagar had a minimum temperature of 4.3 degree Celsius, according to the Met department here.

The state's capital and Bikaner recorded a minimum temperature of 4.5 degrees. Chittorgarh had a low of 6.6 degrees, while Dabok recorded 6.8 degree Celsius minimum temperature. Jaisalmer recorded a low of 7.3 degrees and Ajmer recorded a minimum temperature 7.5 degree Celsius. Punjab, Haryana and Chandigarh continued to reel under dense fog and intense cold crippled normal life, with air, rail and road traffic going haywire in the region due to reduced visibility. A thick blanket of fog enveloped the entire region affecting all modes of traffic, officials said here. Most of the flights remained grounded at Chandigarh airport and several trains passing through the region, including Howrah express, Malwa express, Tata Moori, Barmer express and Shan-e-Punjab were running hours behind schedule, they said. - Times Of India.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

MASS UFO SIGHTINGS: Symbols of an Alien Sky - UFO Sightings in Ladakh, India Spook Soldiers?!

November 7, 2012 - LADAKH, INDIA - Units of the Indian Army and the Indo-Tibetan Border Police Force (ITBP) have reported Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOS) in the Ladakh region of Jammu and Kashmir. An ITBP unit based in Thakung, close to the Pangong Tso Lake, reported over 100 sightings of luminous objects between August 1 and October 15 this year. In reports sent to their Delhi headquarters in September, and to the Prime Minister's Office (PMO), they described sighting "Unidentified Luminous Objects" at day and by night. The yellowish spheres appear to lift off from the horizon on the Chinese side and slowly traverse the sky for three to five hours before disappearing. These were not unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVS), drones or even low earth-orbiting satellites, say Army officials who have studied the hazy photographs taken by ITBP.

Robot-like airborne figure photographed by scientific team in 2004 at Samudra Tapu.   

Drone sightings are verified and logged separately. The Army has reported 99 sightings of Chinese drones between January and August this year: 62 sightings were reported in the western sector, the Ladakh region, and 37 in the eastern sector in Arunachal Pradesh. Three of these drones intruded into territory claimed by India along the 365-km-long border with China in Ladakh, manned by ITBP. Such mysterious lights have been sighted before in Ladakh, a barren, 86,000 sq km heavily militarised zone wedged between Pakistan-occupied-Kashmir and Chinese-occupied Aksai Chin. The persistent sightings by the ITBP this year, however, worried the Army's Leh-based 14 Corps. The ITBP, did not respond to a detailed India Today questionnaire.  In September, the Army moved a mobile ground-based radar unit and a spectrum analyser-that picks up frequencies emitted from any object-to a mountaintop near the 160-km-long, ribbon-shaped Pangong Lake that lies between India and China. The radar could not detect the object that was being tracked visually, in dicating it was non-metallic. The spectrum analyser could not detect any signals being emitted from them. The Army also flew a reconnaissance drone in the direction of the floating object, but it proved a futile exercise. The drone reached its maximum altitude but lost sight of the floating object.  In late September this year, a team of astronomers from the Indian Astronomical Observatory at Hanle, 150 km south of the lake, studied the airborne phenomena for three days. The team spotted the flying objects, Army officials say, but could not conclusively establish what they were. They did, however, say that the objects were "non celestial" and ruled out meteors and planets.  Scientists however say, the harsh geography and sparse demography of the great Himalayan range that separates Kashmir Valley from Ladakh, lends itself to unusual sightings. "The region is snowbound in winter, has few roads and is one of the most isolated places in India," says Sunil Dhar, a geologist at the government Post Graduate College in Dharamshala, who has studied glaciers in the region for 15 years. 
 

Yet, none of the experts from the National Technical Research Organisation (NTRO)-in charge of technical intelligence-and Defence Research Development Organisation (DRDO), has been able to identify the objects. This has caused embarrassment rather than fear in the establishment. "Something is clearly wrong, if our combined scientific resources can't explain the phenomena," says a senior Army official in Delhi. Intelligence officials say these objects could be a crude psychological operation by China, or sophisticated probes attempting to ascertain India's defences in Ladakh. "We can't ignore these sightings. We need to probe what new technology might have been deployed there, says former Indian Air Force (IAF) chief Air Chief Marshal (retired) P.V. Naik. In 2010, the IAF probed and dismissed Army sightings of such luminous objects as Chinese lanterns. UFO sightings have been endemic to Ladakh over the past decade. In late 2003, 14 Corps sent a detailed report on sightings of luminous objects to Army headquarters. Army troops on posts along Siachen had seen floating lights on the Chinese side. But reporting such phenomena risks inviting ridicule. When told about them at a northern command presentation in Leh, the then army chief, General N.C. Vij, had angrily dismissed the reports as hallucinations. Scientists say the mysterious objects are not necessarily from outer space.  There is no evidence of UFOS being of extra-terrestrial origin, says reputed Pune-based astrophysicist Jayant Narlikar. The implication of them being alien objects is fancy, not fact, he says.

There is still no explanation, however, for what is believed to be the clearest UFO sighting yet, in the Lahaul-Spiti region of Himachal Pradesh less than 100 km south of Ladakh in 2004. A five-member group of geologists and glaciologists led by Dr Anil Kulkarni of the ISRO's Space Applications Centre in Ahmedabad were on a research trip through the barren Samudra Tapu Valley. They filmed a fourfoot tall robot-like figure, that walked along the valley, 50 m away from them. The humanoid object then rapidly became airborne and disappeared. The encounter lasted 40 minutes.  It was seen by 14 persons including the six scientists. Kulkarni then interviewed each expedition member separately to verify what the team had seen. Copies of his detailed report were circulated to the PMO, ISRO, the Army and several intelligence agencies. Kulkarni established his team hadn't seen natural phenomenon. The matter, however, was buried soon after.  Sunil Dhar, who was part of the 2004 expedition, terms the sighting of the unidentified object an unforgettable experience. Locals, he says, have reported sighting mysterious objects for many years.  These are unsolved mysteries that need more intensive study, he says. Left unexplained, the Ladakh sightings risk slipping into the crack between fact and science fiction. - India Today.

Friday, June 15, 2012

EXTREME WEATHER: Acute Water Shortages - India's Capital in Water Crisis After Supplies Are Cut During Searing Heat Wave!

Large parts of New Delhi were struggling with acute water shortages on Friday after a neighbouring state cut its supplies at the peak of summer, officials said.  The sprawling Indian capital, with a population of 16 million sweltering in 43 degree C (109.4 F) summer heat, relies on four neighbouring states for its water -- Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Punjab and Uttarakhand. 

Haryana, the biggest supplier, cut its flow to the city on Thursday and about three million people have suffered shortages or been completely cut off, according to the Delhi Jal Board, a government agency responsible for water supply.  Some of the capital's smartest districts are among the affected areas, and the crisis reflects growing water stresses in the country of 1.2 billion people.  "Suddenly, Haryana is refusing to release water to Delhi," a top Delhi Jal Board official told AFP, requesting anonymity.  "We are struggling at all levels. Every minute we are registering complaints of water shortage. This crisis has left us in a mess."  Several states across India face major challenges over water supply, triggering long-running legal battles over water sharing.  Delhi Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit accused Haryana, which says it has to conserve water for its own residents, of "playing foul" with the capital.

"We are not asking for any favours. We want what is due to us," Dikshit said in a statement Thursday.  In the peak of summer, New Delhi needs 1,100 million gallons of water every day, according to the Delhi Jal Board, but public water providers are able to only supply 835 million gallons.  "There is always a supply-demand gap but this gap is just widening and worsening the crisis," said Himanshu Thakkar, an expert on water management at the South Asia Network on Dams, Rivers and People research group in New Delhi.  According to a federal government report on water consumption in 2010, usage per capita in Delhi is higher than in most European cities.  "Delhi is a privileged city, it is a spoilt child. It does not use rain water harvesting, refuses to recharge 600 water bodies (reservoirs) and just chooses to complain about shortages," said Thakkar.  A 2011 study by experts published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a US journal, estimated that more than one billion urban Indians will face serious water shortages by 2050.  India's six biggest cities -- Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, Bangalore, Chennai and Hyderabad -- are among those most affected by the shortages. - Terra Daily.

Monday, March 5, 2012

PLANETARY TREMORS: 5.2 Magnitude Earthquake Hits Just Outside New Delhi - Rattles Indian Capital!

A 5.2-magnitude earthquake rattled the Indian capital on Monday as it hit the state of Haryana just outside New Delhi, the U.S. Geological Survey said.


The quake at 1:11 p.m. local time (0741 GMT) caused more than 10 seconds of tremors felt in and around the Indian capital. People ran into the streets after feeling the tremors. There were no immediate reports of damages or injury in the city of 16.7 million.
The Indian Meteorological Department said the epicenter of the quake was in Bahadurgarh, a town on the border between New Delhi and Haryana, which sits to the northeast of the capital. The department’s head of seismology, R.S. Dattatrayam, said he didn’t expect significant aftershocks because of the low magnitude of the earthquake. New Delhi sits near two faults and just two weeks ago underwent its first citywide earthquake drill to prepare civil servants and hospital services for emergencies. - Washington Post.


Wednesday, December 21, 2011

EXTREME WEATHER: Cold Wave and Heavy Fog Sweeps Across Northern India - Death Toll Rises to 39, Life Disrupted With Sub-Zero Temperatures!


The death toll in a cold wave sweeping through northern India has risen to 39, media reports say.

Over 100,000 people sleep rough in Delhi.
The majority of deaths were in the state of Uttar Pradesh. Punjab and Haryana are among the other northern states badly hit. Most deaths take place among the homeless and the elderly. Last week, the country's Supreme Court ordered states to provide adequate night shelters for the homeless during the winter. "You should not allow even a single person to die this winter from the freezing cold," the judges said. 

Heavy fog and a cold wind have disrupted life across northern India with sub-zero temperatures in Indian-administered Kashmir. Reports say nine people have died in Punjab and two in Uttar Pradesh since Sunday evening. The capital, Delhi, is also in the throes of a cold snap, with temperatures dipping to 2.3C and fog disrupting flight schedules. The cold wave has forced schools to shut in the state of Bihar until 25 December, reports said. An official from the meteorological department said the cold weather would continue for a number of days. - BBC.