Monthly Earth Changes Update fr/Aquarian Solutions

 

October 2011 will host extreme weather, volcanic eruptions, super jor quakes, hurricanes, severe cold fronts, hyper solar actvity, tsunamis, floods, perilous cyclones, sink holes, strong deluge of water, land and mudslides, extreme weather around the world
floods will continue along with droughts, still chances for dangerous tornadoes,while weather records will broken.
The month was actually kicked off with a New Moon in Libra on September 27th @ 11:09 AM UT
which continues to initiate major weather events from typhoons to hurricanes along with seismic and volcanic eruptions
Then on October 11th a fiery Full Moon in Aries @ 19 degrees on 7:06 PM PDT or 10:06 PM EDT leads to massive seismic and volcanic events.
Events will happen quickly after the Full Moon:
Mercury will enter Scorpio on Oct. 13th. the same day that the Sun meets Saturn in Libra bringing in cold winter weather
Venus already in Scorpio by Oct. 8th. will oppose Jupiter on October 14th. for major storms and seismic events
Then a double whammy with Mercury opposing Jupiter in Taurus on October 17th.
The month ends with the Scorpio New Moon on October 26th in the 4th degree of Scorpio occuring @ 12:56 PM PDT or 3:56 PM EDT –
for more, go to:    http://www.aquasoul.com/index2.html

SakuraJima Volcano Erupts

Explosive eruptions and information on SakuraJima volcano, Japan + video’s

Last update: October 3, 2011 at 3:52 pm by By 

The webcam videos below are from October 1 and October 3, 2011. They show a couple of explosive eruptions.
Sakurajima’s activity became prominent in 1955, and the volcano has been erupting almost constantly ever sinceThousands of small explosions occur each year, throwing ash to heights of up to a few kilometers above the mountain.
The Sakurajima Volcano Observatory was set up in 1960 to monitor these eruptions.

(to see the current videos, go to:    http://earthquake-report.com/2011/10/03/explosive-eruptions-and-information-on-sakurajima-volcano-japan-videos/)

1914 eruption of Sakurajima

 

Image courtesy TANAKA Juuyoh – CC-By-3.0

The 1914 eruption was the most powerful in twentieth-century JapanLava flows filled the narrow strait between the island and the mainland, turning it into a peninsula. The volcano had been dormant for over a century until1914.The 1914 eruption began on January 11.Almost all residents had left the island in the previous days, in response to several large earthquakes that warned them that an eruption was imminent. Initially, the eruption was very explosive, generating eruption columns and pyroclastic flows, but after a very large earthquake on January 13, 1914 which killed 35 people, it became effusive, generating a large lava flow.  Lava flows are rare in Japan—the high silica content of the magmas there mean that explosive eruptions are far more common but the lava flows at Sakurajima continued for months.

 

Pre-eruption earthquakes killed at least 35 people; caused an evacuation and significant changes to the local topology.

The island grew, engulfing several smaller islands nearby, and eventually becoming connected to the mainland by a narrow isthmus. Parts of Kagoshima bay became significantly shallower, and tides were affected, becoming higher as a result.

During the final stages of the eruption, the centre of the Aira Caldera sank by about 60 centimetres (24 in), due to subsidence caused by the emptying out of the underlying magma chamber. The fact that the subsidence occurred at the centre of the caldera rather than directly underneath Sakurajima showed that the volcano draws its magma from the same reservoir that fed the ancient caldera-forming eruption. The eruption partly inspired a 1914 movie, Wrath of the Gods, centering around a family curse that ostensibly causes the eruption.

to read more on this, see the videos, etc., go to:    http://earthquake-report.com/2011/10/03/explosive-eruptions-and-information-on-sakurajima-volcano-japan-videos/

Ozone Hole in Arctic

Earth’s First Arctic Ozone Hole Recorded

Wynne Parry, Senior Writer LiveScience
Date: 02 October 2011 Time: 01:01 PM ET
stratosphere clouds over Arctic
Stratospheric clouds above the Arctic.
CREDIT: Ross J. Salawitch, University of Maryland

The high atmosphere over the Arctic lost an unprecedented amount of its protective ozone earlier this year, so much that conditions echoed the infamous ozone hole that forms annually over the opposite side of the planet, the Antarctic, scientists say.

“For the first time, sufficient loss occurred to reasonably be described as an Arctic ozone hole,” write researchers in an article released Oct. 2 by the journal Nature.

Some degree of ozone loss above the Arctic, and the formation of the Antarctic ozone hole, are annual events during the poles’ respective winters. They are driven by a combination of cold temperatures and lingering ozone-depleting pollutants

The reactions that convert less reactive chemicals into ozone-destroying ones take place within what is known as the polar vortex, an atmospheric circulation pattern created by the rotation of the Earth and cold temperatures. This past winter and spring saw an unusually strong polar vortex and an unusually long cold period.

This year’s record vortex persisted over the Arctic from December to the end of March, and the cold temperatures extended down to a remarkably low altitude, the researchers write.

At altitudes of about 11 to 12 miles (18 to 20 kilometers), more than 80 percent of the ozone present in January had been chemically destroyed by late March.

The same dynamics create the infamous ozone hole over Antarctica. But above the South Pole, ozone is essentially completely removed from the lower stratosphere ever year. Above the North Pole, however, ozone loss is highly variable and has, until now, been much more limited, writes the international research team led by Gloria Manney of the California Institute of Technology.

Countries agreed to end their production of the substances ultimately responsible for destruction of the ozone in 1987 with the Montreal Protocol. However, these pollutants, including chlorofluorocarbons, still linger in the atmosphere. Ozone loss is expected to improve in the coming decades as atmospheric levels of these chemicals decline.

On the Earth’s surface, ozone is a pollutant, but in the stratosphere it forms a protective layer that reflects ultraviolet radiation back out into space. Ultraviolet rays can damage DNA and lead to skin cancer and other problems

to rea more, go to:   http://www.livescience.com/16337-arctic-ozone-hole.html

Windsor, Ontario Hum

Ontario city mystified by whole lotta shakin’ underground

BY DALSON CHEN, POSTMEDIA NEWS AUGUST 12, 2011
  
Councillor Al Maghnieh looks over maps at his new home in Windsor on Thursday, August 12, 2011. Maghnieh is hoping to find the source of the unexplained rumblings that have been plaguing the area.

Councillor Al Maghnieh looks over maps at his new home in Windsor on Thursday, August 12, 2011. Maghnieh is hoping to find the source of the unexplained rumblings that have been plaguing the area.

Photograph by: Tyler Brownbridge, The Windsor Star

WINDSOR — For months, residents of south and west Windsor have been wondering and worrying about vibrations of unknown origin.

 

And now, those mysterious rumblings under the city have found a new believer — the city’s Ward 10 Coun. Al Maghnieh, who says it’s time to start taking the phenomenon seriously.

 

“It’s very present and real,” he said.

 

Maghnieh added that those who think the phenomenon is a joke or that its proponents are “crazy” need to grasp the implications in terms of health and the environment.

 

“I mean, it’s actually scary to think that this is going on and we still can’t pinpoint what it is,” he said.

 

“This is potentially very dangerous.”

 

Maghnieh said he first started receiving calls from concerned citizens back in March.

 

But it wasn’t until the early hours of Friday morning — when he’d arranged to visit the homes of rumble witnesses — that he experienced the sensation himself.

 

“It’s a very sharp, consistent rumble sound,” Maghnieh said. “Sometimes it’s like a hum.”

 

The city councillor said that at one point, he put a half-full water bottle on the ground and could see the vibrations causing ripples on the water’s surface.

 

At another point, he could hear the aluminum siding of a house rattle due to the vibrations.

 

“It was very obvious. It was very evident,” Maghnieh said. “It sent shivers up my spine.”

 

Maghnieh said he’s so far received about two dozen calls and a half-dozen emails from different people in his ward with complaints about the rumble.

 

When he followed up on some of the recent reports, two homeowners agreed to let him on their properties and investigate.

 

The time period between 1 a.m. and 3 a.m. was chosen because that’s when the vibrations are reportedly the most distinct.

 

“I don’t know if it’s stronger then or not. Maybe it’s just because it’s quieter outside,” Maghnieh said.

 

Although the Ministry of the Environment has studied the matter and has ruled out industrial sources, Maghnieh said there needs to be further and fuller investigation.

 

“You can’t have hundreds of people just imagining these things,” Maghnieh said. “We need resources. We need co-operation. We need somebody assigned to this.”

 

Now Maghnieh is preparing a map of his ward to track the location of the rumblings, with radii indicating where the rumblings have been the strongest.

 

It might not be long until the issue hits Maghnieh even closer to home: He recently finalized purchase of a house on Everts Avenue, and some of the rumbling reports he’s received are from fellow Everts Avenue residents.

 

“On my own street,” Maghnieh exclaimed. “On my new driveway, my first day arriving at my home — three different residents from three different homes came to welcome me to the neighbourhood, and the first thing they said was: ‘There are rumblings here. It’s bad.'”

 

Maghnieh said he doesn’t regret buying the house. “In fact, now I’m even more motivated to get to the bottom of this.”

© Copyright (c) The Windsor Star

Read more:http://www.windsorstar.com/Ontario+city+mystified+whole+lotta+shakin+underground/5248858/story.html#ixzz1ZYP8sXHV

Draconid Meteor Shower Peak 10/7-8

EarthSky’s meteor shower guide for 2011

Image Credit: Jimmy Westlake ©1985

Image Credit: Jimmy Westlake ©1985
The Draconid meteor shower might be fantastic in 2011 on the nights of October 7 and 8. Or the shower might be a washout.

The next two major meteor showers are coming up in October 2011, and there’s possible exciting news this year about the October Draconid meteor shower. That is, earlier in 2011, an astronomer predicted that the Draconids might produce a spurt of 1,000 meteors per hour for a brief time, for some lucky observers on Earth. That’s the good news. The bad news is that the moon is in the way. Still, don’t let the moon stop you. Would you want to be that guy sitting indoors watching TV while everyone is oo-ing and ah-ing over a great meteor shower going on outside – even if it is happening in moonlight? I wouldn’t either. Check the skies frequently on the nights of October 7 and 8. Better yet, go camping on those nights, and sit outside under clear dark country skies. We have our fingers crossed the Draconids will deliver for you. For more, see below.

Visit EarthSky Tonight – night sky news updated daily!

Coming up in 2011

October 7 and 8, 2011 Draconids
The radiant point for the Draconid meteor shower almost coincides with the head of the constellation Draco the Dragon in the northern sky. That’s why the Draconids are best viewed from the northern hemisphere. The Draconid shower is a real oddity, in that the radiant point stands highest in the sky as darkness falls. Unlike many meteor showers, the Draconids are more likely to fly in the evening hours than in the morning hours after midnight. This shower is usually a sleeper, producing only a handful of languid meteors per hour in most years. But watch out if the Dragon awakes! Earlier in 2011, an astronomer predicted that, this year, fiery Draco might spew forth up to a thousand meteors in a single hour. Even if the predicted outburst comes in 2011, the shower must compete with a big and brilliant waxing gibbous moon. Moonlight will surely interfere with the show. The glare of moonlight is sure to interfere with the 2011 Draconid shower, but you should try viewing it on the peak evenings of October 7 and 8, anyway, to see if the predicted outburst occurs.

from:    http://earthsky.org/astronomy-essentials/earthskys-meteor-shower-guide

Update on Hurricane Ophelia

 

 

11:00 PM AST Fri Sep 30
Location: 26.2°N 63.1°W
Max sustained: 120 mph
Moving: N at 17 mph
Min pressure: 956 mb

Tropical Storm Ophelia has quickly exploded to Major Hurricane Strength, now being a category 3 with sustained winds at 120 mph. It is quite amazing what wind shear can do to a tropical system. This cyclones life, until about 72 hours ago, was encountering some strong upper level wind shear that was preventing this system from developing.  At one point, it weakened to a depression with the National Hurricane Center giving it one a 10% chance of the system developing back again. Just as the cyclone weakened, upper level wind shear began to weaken and the depression quickly reorganized into a tropical storm again. About 24 hours ago, the National Hurricane Center had most computer models increasing the storm to a category 1 hurricane. Apparently the upper level wind shear was still weak and other atmospheric conditions suggested the hurricane to continue to grow and that is exactly what happened. It quickly exploded to category 3 strength. Currently the closest piece of land near its track is Bermuda. The island is currently under a tropical storm watch. The hurricane is not expected to weaken much but is expected to track east of the island meaning that the left bands of the system will cross over Bermuda. That part is where the weaker winds are located thus why only a tropical storm watch has been issued and not a hurricane watch.  Bermuda is outlined in yellow which signifies the tropical storm watch. So far no watches has been posted for parts of Canada, however that may change in the next day or two as Ophelia gets closer. The system will begin to weaken after passing Bermuda as it enters cooler waters and then turn to the east over the far northern Atlantic Ocean.

-Gino Recchia

10/1/2011

12:05AM ET

to read more, go to:    http://centralstorm.wordpress.com/

CIA Silent on Climate Change

CIA Keeps Its Climate Work Under Wraps

—By Kate Sheppard

| Thu Sep. 22, 2011 9:45 AM PDT
pagedooley/Flickr

As I reported last month, the CIA’s Center on Climate Change and National Security has been keeping a low profile—probably because Republican members of Congress have been trying to ax the program. But apparently the CIA is going so far as to keep all information about the program classified, Secrecy News reported.

The CIA categorically denied a request under the Freedom of Information Act for copies of studies or reports from the center on climate change impacts. Jeffrey Richelson, an intelligence historian with the National Security Archive, filed the FOIA request. And while it’s conceivable that some of the work the center is doing should be classified, it seems rather unreasonable that all if their work should be secret.

Steven Aftergood of Secrecy News summed up the problem with this approach:

The CIA response indicates a fundamental lack of discernment that calls into question the integrity of the Center on Climate Change, if not the Agency as a whole. If the CIA really thinks (or pretends to think) that every document produced by the Center constitutes a potential threat to national security, who can expect the Center to say anything intelligent or useful about climate change? Security robots cannot help us navigate the environmental challenges ahead. Better to allocate the scarce resources to others who can.

This is an issue that came up repeatedly in my reporting on the center. Several people in the national security community raised the question of whether our traditional intelligence-gathering programs are really the best way to deal with climate change and national security, for a lot of good reasons. Climate change is a threat much different than traditional security concerns, and the agency’s experts might not be the best suited for looking at it. It’s an international problem, and addressing it will require more openness, cooperation, and transparency with other nations and stakeholders, not less of it. And the sea level rise, droughts, famines, and extreme weather events associated with climate change aren’t exactly secrets.

The agency’s strategy, in light of attacks from climate skeptics, seems to be to lay low and hope no one notices them. (Trust me, I tried desperately to get info about the program for my story last month, to no avail.) But that makes it practically impossible to publicly justify the program’s existence, given that we have no idea what they’re up to over there.

http://motherjones.com/blue-marble/2011/09/cia-keeps-its-climate-work-under-wraps

Latest on Ophelia & Nesat

Dr. Jeff Masters’ WunderBlog

Ophelia strengthening; Typhoon Nalgae a new threat to the Philippines
Posted by: JeffMasters, 1:51 PM GMT on September 29, 2011 +4
Tropical Storm Ophelia is strengthening as it pulls away from the Lesser Antilles Islands and heads north-northwest. Recentsatellite loops show that Ophelia has developed a Central Dense Overcast (CDO) of high cirrus clouds over its core, which is characteristic of strengthening tropical storms that are nearing hurricane intensity. Dry air and moderate wind shear of 15 – 20 knots are slowing down Ophelia’s intensification, but by Friday morning, wind shear is expected to fall to 10 – 15 knots, and remain below 15 knots through Sunday morning. This should allow Ophelia to intensify into a hurricane on Friday. Most of the models agree that Ophelia will track far enough to the east of Bermuda that the island should see sustained winds below 45 mph, since it will be on the weak (left) side of the storm. We can’t rule out the possibility that Bermuda will receive hurricane force winds yet, but the odds are low–the 5 am wind probability forecast from NHC gave Bermuda just a 3% chance of receiving hurricane force winds. Ophelia’s closest approach to the island will be late Saturday night and early Sunday morning. Ophelia is likely to bring high winds and heavy rains to Southeast Newfoundland Sunday night, as a weakening tropical storm.

In the middle Atlantic, Tropical Storm Philippe is headed west-northwest, and is not expected to trouble and land areas.Satellite loops show Philippe is a small system with little heavy thunderstorm activity. Wind shear is expected to diminish some today over the storm, which should allow the storm to intensify. However, by Saturday, Philippe will be encountering very high wind shear of 30 – 40 knots associated with the upper-level outflow from Ophelia. This shear will probably be high enough to destroy Philippe by Monday. In the event Philippe does survive the shear, the storm could penetrate far enough west that Bermuda might need to be concerned with it.

Elsewhere in the Atlantic, none of the computer models is calling for a new tropical storm to form in the coming seven days. The large-scale environment over the Atlantic currently favors sinking air, due to the current phase of the Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO). This situation will likely last well into next week, and will discourage formation of new tropical storms. The MJO is a 30-60 day cycle of thunderstorm activity that affects the tropics.


Figure 1. Morning satellite image of Ophelia, showing the large Central Dense Overcast (CDO) that has formed.

Typhoon Nesat battering China
Typhoon Nesat hit China’s Hainan Island today as a Category 1 typhoon with 75 mph winds. While Nesat’s winds and storm surge will not cause major damage, it is a very wet storm, capable of dropping up to 8 inches of rain in 24 hours, according to latest satellite rainfall forecasts. Haikou on Hainan Island recorded a wind gust of 78 mph and 3.23″ of rain as the eyewall passed just to the north. Nesat will hit Vietnam near Hanoi as a tropical storm on Saturday.

Nesat roared across Luzon Island in the Philippines Monday as a powerful Category 3 typhoon with 120 mph winds, leaving35 people dead and 45 missing. The Philippines has a new worry today: Typhoon Nalgae has formed 700 miles to the east of Luzon Island, and is expected to follow a course just to the north of Nesat’s. Nalgae is expected to intensify into a major Category 3 typhoon and hit the northern portion of Luzon on Saturday afternoon, local time. With soils on the island already saturated from the heavy rains Nesat brought, the new typhoon promises to bring heavy flooding to Luzon this weekend.


Figure 2. True-color MODIS image of Typhoon Nesat over the South China Sea taken at 1:35 pm local time September 28, 2011. At the time, Nesat was a Category 1 typhoon with 75 mph winds. Image credit: NASA.

Photo of Aurora Post 9/26 CME

NIGHT TO REMEMBER: A coronal mass ejection (CME) hit Earth’s magnetic field around noon Universal Time on Sept. 26th. The impact set the stage for a night to remember. As soon as darkness fell over Scandinavia, auroras filled the sky with such intensity that they were visible through rain clouds. Fredrik Broms photographed the scene from Kvaløya, Norway:

“These were some of the most amazing auroras I have ever seen,” says Broms, a longtime observer of the Arctic lights. “The colours were absolutely stunning with purple and deep blood-red in addition to the green. It was a night I will never forget!

Sky watchers at the highest latitudes should remain alert for auroras as Earth’s magnetic field continues to reverberate from the CME impact.

from:    spaceweather.com

Powerful Storm Targeting Pacific Northwest

Weather Forecast: Powerful “Superstorm” to slam the Pacific Northwest

Published on September 28, 2011 2:30 am PT
– By TWS Meteorologist


(TheWeatherSpace.com) – A strong surface low will develop in the Pacific Ocean, aided by a powerful upper level jet that will bring gusty winds, severe thunderstorms, and even a tornado chance to the Pacific Northwest later this weekend into next week. 


It is the season for ‘bomb’ type systems. ‘Bombs’ is a weather term for rapidly deepening low pressure at the surface and this is what is scheduled for Sunday or Monday across the Pacific Northwest

As of right now the probability of damaging winds for inland areas would depend on the low’s track, but to be conservative I will keep the damaging winds along the coast, where less friction resides. Anyone living on the coast of Washington and Oregon will need to keep tuned to further updates here at TWS and on the Pacific Northwest Facebook Page below.

Because of the deeper moisture available, colder mid-level temperatures, excellent upper level jet dynamics. and winds backing in the lower levels, have decided to put the mention in here of the chance of severe thunderstorms, including isolated tornadoes with this system.

Locations are not certain with the small-scale features but this system will closely be monitored here at TheWeatherSpace.com.

The storm moves northeast into Canada from there and another frontal zone quickly moves hit next week.

This “bomb” is the signal to ‘spin’ the atmosphere into the new season.

.from:    As of right now the probability of damaging winds for inland areas would depend on the low’s track, but to be conservative I will keep the damaging winds along the coast, where less friction resides. Anyone living on the coast of Washington and Oregon will need to keep tuned to further updates here at TWS and on the Pacific Northwest Facebook Page below.

Because of the deeper moisture available, colder mid-level temperatures, excellent upper level jet dynamics. and winds backing in the lower levels, have decided to put the mention in here of the chance of severe thunderstorms, including isolated tornadoes with this system.

Locations are not certain with the small-scale features but this system will closely be monitored here at TheWeatherSpace.com.

The storm moves northeast into Canada from there and another frontal zone quickly moves hit next week.

This “bomb” is the signal to ‘spin’ the atmosphere into the new season.