Monday, 8 February 2016

Storm Imogen Batters England and Wales


Storm Imogen battered parts of England and Wales with powerful winds and downpours Sunday night into Monday.
The storm caused more than 14,000 power cuts, according to the BBC. The brunt of the outages have occurred across the South West of England where nearly 10,000 homes lost power.
Travel disruptions have been widespread across the southern U.K. including rail delays, flight delays and road closures due to flooding and high winds.
Several Cornwall schools were closed or evacuated due to power cuts and storm damage. Two children were injured when a wall collapsed onto them amid the dangerous weather, according toThe Guardian.
Downpours from Imogen hit areas that were already soaked by heavy spells of rain and resulted in numerous flood warnings. Wales, the South West of England and the Midlands were hit the hardest by heavy rain and flooding incidents.
Rainfall surpassed 25 mm (1.00 inch) in Shap and Odiham in England and approached 50 mm (2 inches) in Capel Curig and Lake Vyrnwy in Wales.
The strongest winds have topped 80 mph across the Isle of Wight, Isles of Scilly and Wales. The highest wind gust recorded is 96 mph at Needles Old Battery on Isle of Wight.
Cornwall reported a peak wind gust of 79 mph during Imogen. Greater London experienced frequent wind gusts of 40-50 mph with a peak gust of 59 mph at London City Airport.
Coastal Wales and southern England also had to deal with phenomenal seas. Seas of 8-10 meters were seen in these areas, and the Met Office reported a maximum wave height of 19.1 meters off the coast of St. Ives, Cornwall.
Conditions will continue to improve into Tuesday morning as Imogen departs, allowing winds to lessen and rainfall to become more showery.


Big "Red Alert" 6.7 mag Earthquake just hit Papua New Guinea..







Big "Red Alert" 6.7 mag Earthquake just hit Papua New Guinea.. 

Time

2016-02-08 16:19:16 (UTC)



Nearby Cities
96km (60mi) WSW of Panguna, Papua New Guinea
107km (66mi) WSW of Arawa, Papua New Guinea
374km (232mi) SE of Kokopo, Papua New Guinea
520km (323mi) ESE of Kimbe, Papua New Guinea
652km (405mi) WNW of Honiara, Solomon Islands
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/at00o28lc5



Big "Red Alert" 6.7 mag Earthquake just hit Papua New Guinea..


Big "Red Alert" 6.7 mag Earthquake just hit Papua New Guinea.. 
Time
2016-02-08 16:19:16 (UTC)

Nearby Cities
96km (60mi) WSW of Panguna, Papua New Guinea
107km (66mi) WSW of Arawa, Papua New Guinea
374km (232mi) SE of Kokopo, Papua New Guinea
520km (323mi) ESE of Kimbe, Papua New Guinea
652km (405mi) WNW of Honiara, Solomon Islands
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eventpage/at00o28lc5


8/2/16 Earthquake Summary Normal and Decreasing as predicted.
















Mercury has finished sending buzzing Earth as it past between Earth and the Sun. This graph which displays the Earthquake reading taken everyday. We can clearly see during the last 2 weeks the Worlds Earthquake have been decreasing strongly.












This Graph shows the monthly Average of strong "Red Alert" Earthquakes. We can see that now in Feb 2016 we have fallen greatly in numbers. The rest of the weeks readings from this month will paint a more precise picture.












This Graph is the Prediction graph (Blue), but i have added the actual Earthquake numbers (Red) to see the correlation. The prediction graph mainly was taken the data from when the planets line up and making a graph of projection into what the Earthquake TREND will look like during the year. Also if we know what will happen in a normal state we can spot data which is abnormal. and create and Alert.












A closer look at the Prediction vs Actual Graph. For the period of the beginning of the year. We can see that yes Mercury did ping Earth in early January. We can also see that now the Earthquake are also decreasing as predicted.






So all is normal, all is as it should be..






God Bless you All 


Amen
















8/2/16 Earthquake Summary Normal and Decreasing as predicted.




Mercury has finished sending buzzing Earth as it past between Earth and the Sun. This graph which displays the Earthquake reading taken everyday. We can clearly see during the last 2 weeks the Worlds Earthquake have been decreasing strongly.


This Graph shows the monthly Average of strong "Red Alert" Earthquakes. We can see that now in Feb 2016 we have fallen greatly in numbers. The rest of the weeks readings from this month will paint a more precise picture.


This Graph is the Prediction graph (Blue), but i have added the actual Earthquake numbers (Red) to see the correlation. The prediction graph mainly was taken the data from when the planets line up and making a graph of projection into what the Earthquake TREND will look like during the year. Also if we know what will happen in a normal state we can spot data which is abnormal. and create and Alert.


A closer look at the Prediction vs Actual Graph. For the period of the beginning of the year. We can see that yes Mercury did ping Earth in early January. We can also see that now the Earthquake are also decreasing as predicted.

So all is normal, all is as it should be..

God Bless you All 
Amen





Monday, 1 February 2016

WHAT?? Polar bear washes up on Scotland’s Isle of Mull







An RSPB officer discovered an exhausted polar bear that had washed up on the Isle of Mull in Scotland when he was conducting a routine wildlife survey earlier today. When he returned to the spot an hour later, the bear had disappeared.







Mull islanders, the coastguard, the local police and Arctic-marine-mammal experts are searching for the missing polar bear, which is thought to have drifted across to the island on an ice floe.


Scientists believe that the colder winter and lower-than-average sea temperatures this year may have allowed the ice floe to remain frozen longer than usual, assisting the polar bear’s passage.


The nearest polar-bear populations to the Isle of Mull are on Greenland and the Svalbard archipelago, between Norway and the North Pole. Other recent visitors to Mull from the high Arctic have included a bearded seal and two northern bottle-nosed whales.


The public have been warned not to approach the polar bear if they see it, as it may be hungry after its long journey.





WHAT?? Polar bear washes up on Scotland’s Isle of Mull


An RSPB officer discovered an exhausted polar bear that had washed up on the Isle of Mull in Scotland when he was conducting a routine wildlife survey earlier today. When he returned to the spot an hour later, the bear had disappeared.

Mull islanders, the coastguard, the local police and Arctic-marine-mammal experts are searching for the missing polar bear, which is thought to have drifted across to the island on an ice floe.
Scientists believe that the colder winter and lower-than-average sea temperatures this year may have allowed the ice floe to remain frozen longer than usual, assisting the polar bear’s passage.
The nearest polar-bear populations to the Isle of Mull are on Greenland and the Svalbard archipelago, between Norway and the North Pole. Other recent visitors to Mull from the high Arctic have included a bearded seal and two northern bottle-nosed whales.
The public have been warned not to approach the polar bear if they see it, as it may be hungry after its long journey.