Sunday, 16 February 2020

VIDEO: Caspian Sea Mysteriously Turns Blood Red.












Residents of the Aktau village in Kazakhstan woke up mystified as the Primorsky Coast turned blood red. The incredible natural phenomenon was observed in in the lagoon of the Caspian Riviera hotel reports Lada.kz.






According to the the site, the incredible sight was also witnessed in 2017 and 2018 in a lagoon near the Chagall Hotel through the Nur Plaza Beach.






According to scientists, single-celled algae, otherwise known as “diatoms”, are what causes the reddish tint to the water. The exotic algae is harmless and safe for fish to swim in.






Environmental experts have confirmed that this is not a case of pollution but rather a natural occurrence. Red-colored mud and algae are prevalent on the Central Asian Sea’s shoreline. This affects the reddish color of the sea’s water.






VIDEO: Caspian Sea Mysteriously Turns Blood Red.



Residents of the Aktau village in Kazakhstan woke up mystified as the Primorsky Coast turned blood red. The incredible natural phenomenon was observed in in the lagoon of the Caspian Riviera hotel reports Lada.kz.

According to the the site, the incredible sight was also witnessed in 2017 and 2018 in a lagoon near the Chagall Hotel through the Nur Plaza Beach.

According to scientists, single-celled algae, otherwise known as “diatoms”, are what causes the reddish tint to the water. The exotic algae is harmless and safe for fish to swim in.

Environmental experts have confirmed that this is not a case of pollution but rather a natural occurrence. Red-colored mud and algae are prevalent on the Central Asian Sea’s shoreline. This affects the reddish color of the sea’s water.

VIDEO: WATER turns BLOOD RED after Turkey EARTHQUAKE

VIDEO: WATER turns BLOOD RED after Turkey EARTHQUAKE

Sunday, 9 February 2020

The worst locust invasion in 70 years currently ravaging Kenya is set to spread across most of east Africa and cause 'massive devastation', the UN warns







  • Swarms have already devastated farmland in Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia

  • They are now threatening to spread to South Sudan, Uganda and Eritrea

  • Tens of thousands of acres of crops destroyed putting food supplies at risk




Swarms of desert locusts could ravage more countries in eastern Africa and threaten the livelihood of many more people, the United Nations' Food and Agricultural Organization said on Monday.


The swarms, first sighted in December, have already destroyed tens of thousands of hectares of farmland in Kenya, Somalia and Ethiopia, threatening food supplies in many areas.


In Kenya, it's the worst locust invasion in 70 years.


The swarms are now threatening to spread to South Sudan, Uganda and Eritrea, said Bukar Tijani, assistant director-general of the FAO's agriculture and consumer protection department.