Wednesday, March 9, 2016

ICE AGE NOW: Global Cooling Continues Relentlessly - Moscow Experiences One Of Its Snowiest Winters In History; 160 PERCENT Above Seasonal Norm!

© Sergei Fadeichev/TASS

March 9, 2016 - MOSCOW, RUSSIA - More than 160% of seasonal norm.

From March 3, 2016 the increase of fresh snow in the city was 245 cm (8 feet).

And there is still almost a month of winter weather.

This means this winter will be one of the snowiest in the annals of Moscow weather.

Thanks to Martin Siebert for this link

"Global Warming or Climate Change," says Martin. "I know." - Ice Age Now.




ANIMAL BEHAVIOR: Disaster Precursors - Shark Bites Boy In Ocean Reef Park, Florida?!


March 9, 2016 - FLORIDA, UNITED STATES - A metro east 12-year-old is recovering from a shark bite while on vacation in Florida.

Michael Wilson was wading in three feet of water Friday at Ocean Reef Park, when a shark sunk its teeth into his foot.

He has a fracture and some scratches.


Michael Wilson.

They say the entire ordeal was pretty scary but the Wilsons still caught a Cardinal's spring training game in Jupiter Sunday afternoon before heading home to O'Fallon, Illinois.

Wilson even used his injury to get the attention and an autograph from his hero Matt Holliday. - KSDK.





RATTLE & HUM: Mysterious Sounds Heard Across The Planet - Unexplained "Sonic Boom Type Of Sounds" Shaking Alhambra, California?!

Alhambra, California. © Vice

March 9, 2016 - CALIFORNIA, UNITED STATES - Out of nowhere on Tuesday night, around 8 PM, Alex Arevalos, a student and graphic designer in Alhambra, California, ten miles east of downtown Los Angeles, heard a single, loud thud.

He immediately asked his sister if she'd slapped his bedroom wall. "She said she didn't, so I automatically blamed the train," Arevalos, who lives near train tracks, told VICE.

Then on Thursday around midnight, two similar sounds woke up Arevalos's father, and when father and son spoke about it in the morning, the younger Arevalos became convinced it was something abnormal.

"This time as soon as I heard it, and heard the walls shake a bit, I listened for the train, but didn't hear anything," adding, "I can tell the difference now [between] the train and the booms."

Arevalos is far from alone. According to the local news site Alhambra Source, residents first reported hearing the booms on February 16 when a woman named Noelle Dominguez alerted her neighbors to them in a private section of the community social network nextdoor.com. "I know this sounds weird. But since [I've been] living in Alhambra, every other night or so I hear a loud explosion-like noise," she wrote. Soon, other nextdoor.com users shared similar experiences with the booms, according to Alhambra Source.

Two nights later, Alhambra Police Department posted about the booms on Facebook. Just after 8 PM, officers received reports of "a loud explosion heard in the northern end of our city."

The police wrote that they've received multiple similar reports in recent weeks, but that "unfortunately, we were unable to locate the origin. We are as puzzled as everyone," Jerry Johnson, the Alhambra police sergeant, told VICE. He said two on-duty officers heard the booms recently, and they rushed toward the source, arriving just 90 seconds after the sound dissipated.


"And then nothing," Johnson said.

In the comments of an Alhambra PD Facebook post, one Facebook user named Anthony Ruiz called the booms, "much too loud to be a firework."

Another user named Christopher Keller described them as akin to a sonic boom, saying he felt a "pressure wave." But he added that they were too close to be sonic booms.

An isolated series of sonic booms shook New Jersey in late January—but that was an isolated incident brought on by several fighter jets breaking the sound barrier around the same time above the area.

Chris Paulson, the administrative services director for the city of Alhambra, also called it a "sonic boom type of sound," made all the more strange by the fact that it's being reported across an unusually wide area. "We've investigated, and it's probably about a mile north to south," he told VICE.

According to Alhambra Source, there are construction projects going on in the area, but the local public works department "does not believe that the projects are the source of the noises." According to Paulson, that's because, "there's simply no construction going on when those noises are heard."

VICE contacted a municipal consulting company called Transtech, an engineering firm that contracts for Alhambra, inspecting safety concerns at city construction projects. Transtech's Alhambra city building official, Ayla Jefferson, told us she had heard of the booms, but has "no knowledge" of their origin.

Meanwhile, the booms continue unabated. For Arevalo, they've become part of life in Alhambra. He described the most recent explosions he heard as "just kind of there." Since he's been living near a train for 13 years, he says he's become accustomed to noise in general, adding that "the only thing affecting my sleep is school."

But not everyone is tuning out the booms. According to Sergeant Johnson, "We're getting calls on this two or three times a day."

"It is a mystery," said Paulson. - Vice.






FIRE IN THE SKY: Mysterious Glowing Fireball Baffles Residents Of Las Vegas And California! [VIDEOS]


March 9, 2016 - UNITED STATES - What was this bright burning light striking the sky of Las Vegas and northern California on March 6, 2016?

It looks like a giant fireball disintegrating in the skies... But wait a minute...


WATCH: Fireball over Las Vegas.




This gigantic fireball is much too slow and remains incandescent for much too much time.

The northern California dashcam video is less clear than this first footage. You see a faint ball of fire as the car turns on the right. But the moving light is too far away to clearly determine its origin:


 WATCH: Large meteor over southern California.





So what are these mysterious lights in the sky?


Let's say that the burning object in the northern California video is a real meteor falling down to Earth on March 6, 2016.

But what about the event filmed over Las Vegas? No meteor will burn so long in our atmosphere.




I didn't get any visits of some green aliens and it doesn't seem to me these are fireworks.

I thus guess this is the re-entry of a man-made space object.

Looking at aerospace.org, there is this rocket body from Chinese Mission Yaogan 10 that is supposed to re-enter tomorrow. But maybe the event occurred a bit faster than predicted. - Strange Sounds.