Spain Experiences its Worst Train Accident in 40 Years An increase in train derailments was one of the first symptoms of the approach of Planet X to become noticeable, being expressed even before Planet X entered the inner solar system in 2003. Planet X was described as affecting the Earth from afar, like tugging on the edge of a spider web where the effects are felt elsewhere on the web; in this way there has been an increase in earthquakes and unpredictable weather going back years, even before Planet X entered the solar system, due to the increased swirling of the Earth’s core. It is therefore logical that an increase in train derailments would accompany any increase in seismic activity – train tracks need to be straight and even the slightest shift to the side of a section of track would cause a train to derail. The area most affected by train derailments is the stretch zone. Stretch zone quakes are silent, and people are generally unaware anything is happening, although signs such as booms and trumpet sounds can occur. This zone stretches from Western Europe across the Eurasian Plate, and also includes the South-East United States, the St. Lawrence Seaway, the Red Sea and the African Rift. In other parts of the world, shifting ground is more associated with earthquakes that people are aware of, such as the Pacific which is compressing, so authorities inspect railway tracks after any seismic activity, reducing the likelihood of accidents. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Some Examples (click on pictures for link): |
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http://www.everythinglubbock.com/news/state-regional/train-with-haz...
Published 10/15 2015 05:45PM
BIG SANDY, TX
A train carrying hazardous material derailed Thursday morning in Big Sandy.
The train was carrying sulfuric acid. However, police said there are no leaks from the Union Pacific railcars. No evacuations were issued in the time since the incident occurred at around 4:00 a.m.
Law enforcement and hazmat crews were on the scene. Authorities did not know what caused the train to derail, and a complete investigation could take several weeks.
A Union Pacific spokesperson, Jeff Degraff, says between 500 to 600 feet of track is damaged and will need to be replaced or repaired before trains go through Big Sandy again.
Officials said a locomotive was pulling 115 railcars when 11 railcars derailed.
https://www.toledoblade.com/local/2015/10/13/Cargo-train-derails-in...
NORTH BALTIMORE, Ohio — A cargo train derailed in a CSX rail yard near this Wood County community early today, authorities said.
There were no injuries, according to the Wood County Sheriff’s Office. Sheriff deputies were notified of the incident at 7:52 a.m., a dispatcher at the office said. The rail yard is about two miles west of North Baltimore at 17000 Deshler Rd.
The dispatcher said she did not know how many cars derailed and whether there was any spillage of hazardous materials. A CSX spokesman was not immediately available for comment.
The incident is under investigation.
North Baltimore is about 32 miles south of Toledo.
Honesty from the Los Angeles Times regarding train derailments:
Why are so many oil trains crashing? Track problems may be to blame
http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-crude-train-safety-20151007-sto...
The only sign of trouble aboard a Norfolk Southern train, hauling roughly 9,000 tons of Canadian crude in western Pennsylvania last year, was a moderate sway in the locomotive as it entered a bend on the Kiskiminetas River.
The first 66 cars had passed safely around the curve when the emergency brakes suddenly engaged, slamming the train to a stop. The conductor trudged back nearly a mile through newly fallen snow to see what happened.
Twenty-one cars had derailed, one slamming through the wall of a nearby factory. Four tank cars were punctured, sending 4,300 gallons of crude pouring out of the tangled wreckage.
The cause of the accident in North Vandergrift was identified as a failure in the rails — not aging or poorly maintained tracks, but a relatively new section laid less than a year earlier.
The February 2014 crash fits into an alarming pattern across North America that helps explain the significant rise of derailments involving oil-hauling trains over the last three years, even as railroads are investing billions of dollars in improving the safety of their networks. A review of 31 crashes that have occurred on oil trains since 2013 puts track failure at the heart of the growing safety problem.
Track problems were blamed on 59% of the crashes, more than double the overall rate for freight train accidents, according to a Times analysis of accident reports. Investigators and rail safety experts are looking at how the weight and movements of oil trains may be causing higher than expected track failures.
The growing number of trains hauling crude oil from Canada and the Northern Plains are among the heaviest on the rails today, many extending more than 100 cars in length and weighing a cumulative 19,000 tons or more.
http://www.ksla.com/story/30227521/train-derails-west-of-simms-texas
Posted: Oct 09, 2015 3:58 PM EST Updated: Oct 09, 2015 5:32 PM EST
SIMMS, TX (KSLA) -
A train derailment Friday afternoon about 6 miles southwest of Simms, Texas, injured no one but left behind a large mess to be cleaned up.
There is no immediate word on whether the crossing at County Road 4269 remains blocked and, if so, how long it will be until it is cleared.
Even so, there should be no major traffic problems as the railroad company removes the debris, Bowie County, Texas, authorities say. They could not say how long the cleanup will take.
At least 13 cars of the Union Pacific train left the tracks, with some overturning.
Simms firefighters extinguished a small fire beneath one of the cars. Otherwise, emergency crews said, the train was carrying sand and posed no threat to public safety.
"Naturally, we always worry about hazardous waste being spilled out here and having to evacuate," said Malvern Stewart, who lives near the railroad tracks nearby in Bassett, Texas.
Simms Fire Chief Paul Beard said: "There is no reason for anyone to be scared or bothered right now as far as this is concerned because there is no haz-mat situation. And there is no danger to the public."
The westbound train was traveling through Bowie County en route to Big Sandy, Texas, when it derailed about 35 miles west of Texarkana.
Residents of the area say this is not the first derailment there.
"We have been lucky so far," Stewart said. "This is just an unforeseen situation that happens."
Representatives of the Bowie County emergency management office have been called in to assess the damage.
And what caused the rail cars to leave the tracks has yet to be determined.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3260750/Amtrak-passenger-tr...
The Amtrak passenger train which derailed in Northfield, Vermont, on Monday morning was sent hurtling by a 'freak' rock slide, the governor has said.
One person was airlifted to hospital and another six went in ambulances to be treated for minor injuries after the southbound train traveling at 57 mph flew off the tracks 10 miles south of Montpelier at 10am.
On Monday afternoon, Gov Peter Shumlin told reporters there was a rock on the track that could not have been avoided even if brakes were applied, adding: 'this really was a freak of nature'.
Passengers traveling from Vermont to Washington, D.C., were sent into a ditch after an apparent rock slide
The crash on Monday morning, shortly after 10am, was caused by a 'real freak of nature,' officials said
A train worker can be seen sat on the tracks (right). Seven people were hospitalized with injuries, there were no deaths
Shumlin praised the 104 passengers, many elderly, who scrambled up the steep hillside to safety after the crash.
'I've just been meeting with the passengers,' Shumlin said, 'and it's really a remarkable thing to hear.
'It was a pretty brutal derailment caused by ledge on the track, and as one of the passengers said to me, "Someone was looking out for us, because literally we walked out of a very difficult situation."'
He said the six passengers with minor injuries were taken to Central Vermont Medical Center in nearby Berlin to be treated.
The seventh was airlifted to Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center. Their injuries are unknown.
Train's Locomotive Derails After Hitting Rock Slide Debris
LYNCHBURG, Va.
Posted Oct 5, 2015
A CSX spokeswoman say a train's locomotive derailed in Lynchburg after it hit debris from a rock slide.
CSX spokeswoman Kaitlyn Barrett tells The News & Advance (http://bit.ly/1LsCAOi ) that the 104-car train was carrying empty crude oil cars, along with two cars containing industrial sand. One of the cars containing industrial sand was damaged.
Barrett says there were no leaks or injuries.
The incident occurred around 3 a.m. Sunday near the site where a CSX train carrying crude oil derailed in April 2014. That derailment sent 30,000 gallons of crude oil in the James River.
Sources:
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireStory/trains-locomotive-derails-...
http://www.newsadvance.com/news/local/authorities-respond-to-partia...
http://www.fauquiernow.com/index.php/fauquier_news/article/fauquier...
September 30, 2015
A freight train derailment about two miles west of Marshall early Wednesday morning created a scene that resembles war’s aftermath.
The accident happened around midnight, according to Norfolk Southern spokesman Susan M. Terpay.
The southbound “train with three locomotives, 7,053 feet long, struck a pile of crossties laying across track at Marshall, derailing nine cars . . . with some cars on their sides,” Ms. Terpay said.
The 44-car train’s two-man crew suffered no injury, she added.
http://www.newsday.com/long-island/2nd-train-derailment-in-a-week-s...
Another derailment on the Long Island Rail Road's tracks -- the second in just over a week -- complicated Wednesday's evening commute but posed no threat to morning riders, according to the LIRR.
The train was not carrying passengers when it derailed as it was leaving the West Side Yard on its way to Penn Station shortly before 5 p.m., according to LIRR spokesman Salvatore Arena, who said he did not know the cause of the derailment.
Arena said the derailed train partially obstructed train access into Penn Station, requiring the LIRR to cancel some trains during the evening rush hour. In all, 13 trains were canceled, the LIRR said.
"This basically lasted about an hour," Arena said. "As a result of the derailment at least for a time, we could not move the requisite number of trains into Penn Station that would allow us to keep on schedule, so they had to cancel a number of trains and have those folks wait for the next scheduled train."
The entrance to Penn Station was "not blocked completely," he said, but the LIRR was unable to get enough trains in to meet demand.
Arena said crews worked into the night to get the train back on its tracks, and he did not expect the problem to extend to Thursday morning's commute.
The derailment of a freight train just west of Hicksville on Sept. 15 snarled the commutes of more than 35,000 commuters for more than a day.
Other rush-hour incidents in recent weeks have also caused major service disruptions, including a Sept. 2 power outage that knocked out the signal system just outside the East River tunnels and a train that struck an abandoned vehicle accidentally driven onto the tracks in Bethpage on Sept. 10.
September 25,2015
Ingham, Australia- A CANE train carrying 70 full bins has derailed in Ingham and hit a power pole around 3:30pm this afternoon.
http://www.townsvillebulletin.com.au/news/cane-train-derails-in-ing...
The train snapped a power pole in half along Blackrock Rd after derailing, with live wires lashing the train for over an hour.
The locomotive was two-thirds full, carrying around 800 tonnes, with Wilmar Cane Supply manager Jim Kirchner saying they were unsure of how the train derailed.
“The cause of the accident is unknown, but Wilmar and the police will be investigating the accident together,” Mr Kirchner said.
“We may need to use a crane to move the locomotive, but we are don’t know just yet ... we have to assess whether the locomotive can be pulled back to the mill to be fixed.”
The driver is believed to be uninjured and emergency services are still on scene.
http://www.newson6.com/story/30076736/two-injured-after-train-derai...
Posted: Sep 21, 2015 8:17 AM EST
OKLAHOMA CITY -
Two people were treated for non-life threatening injuries after a train derailed in northwest Oklahoma City, Sunday night.
Oklahoma City Police said it was around 8:40 p.m. Sunday when they received the call to rush to the train tracks at N.W. 10th near the Kilpatrick Turnpike.
According to Union Pacific, which operates the train, eight rail cars and two locomotives were involved and thrown off the track.
The train was not carrying hazardous material at the time of the crash, only scrap paper and scrap metal. But the Oklahoma City Fire Department monitored the air quality and said it is does not pose a threat nearby.
The conductor and another worker on the train at the time of the crash were treated for non-life threatening injuries at a nearby hospital.
It was approximately 6 a.m. Monday when the train was removed from the area, but the cars which derailed will not be removed until later Monday afternoon, according to a Union Pacific spokesperson.
Meanwhile the investigation as to what caused this derailment is still going on and it will be some time before that can figure that out. UP will conduct its own investigation and will submit a report to the Federal Railroad Association.
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