TOTAL DESTRUCTION IN PARTS OF CEBU CITY, PHILIPPINES, 05.11.25
Massive flooding in Da Nang, Vietnam. 30.10.2025.
Giant waves crash over seawalls during a storm
in the suburbs of Taipei, Taiwan. 21.10.2025
"We warned at the start of ZetaTalk, in 1995, that unpredictable weather extremes, switching about from drought to deluge, would occur and increase on a lineal basis up until the pole shift. Where this occurred steadily, it has only recently become undeniable. ZetaTalk, and only ZetaTalk, warned of these weather changes, at that early date. Our early warnings spoke to the issue of global heating from the core outward, hardly Global Warming, a surface or atmospheric issue, but caused by consternation in the core. Affected by the approach of Planet X, which was by then starting to zoom rapidly toward the inner solar system for its periodic passage, the core was churning, melting the permafrost and glaciers and riling up volcanoes. When the passage did not occur as expected in 2003 because Planet X had stalled in the inner solar system, we explained the increasing weather irregularities in the context of the global wobble that had ensued - weather wobbles where the Earth is suddenly forced under air masses, churning them. This evolved by 2005 into a looping jet stream, loops breaking away and turning like a tornado to affect the air masses underneath. Meanwhile, on Planet Earth, droughts had become more intractable and deluges positively frightening, temperature swings bringing snow in summer in the tropics and searing heat in Arctic regions, with the violence of storms increasing in number and ferocity."
ZETATALK
Wild Weather, the Wobble Effect - Earth Changes and the Pole Shift
Comment
Morocco hits 121°F (49.6°C): a national all-time heat record
Wednesday, 18 July 2012
The first new all-time national temperature record of 2012 belongs to Morocco, thanks to the 121.3°F (49.6°C) temperature measured at Marrakech on July 17, 2012. According to the Wunderground International Records data base maintained by our weather historian, Christopher C. Burt, the previous record was 120.4°F (49.1°C) at Agadir on July 30, 2009. A hotter temperature of 51.7°C (125.1°F) was reported from Aghadir (Agadir) Souss Massa Dra region on 17 August 1940 during a chergui wind event. However, this reading is considered unreliable by weather records researcher Maximiliano Herrera, since the temperature was 6°C higher than that measured at nearby stations.
Seven nations set all time heat records in 2011. Nineteen nations (plus the the U.K.'s Ascension Island) set all-time extreme heat records in 2010. One nation (Zambia, in 2011) set an all-time cold record during the period 2010 - 2012. With a very hot airmass in place over much of North Africa, the Middle East, and Western Asia the remainder of this week, more all-time national heat records may fall.
http://sawdis1.blogspot.com.ar/2012/07/morocco-hits-121f-496c-natio...
http://www.rt.com/news/russia-floods-chelyabinsk-chechnya-219/
Russia is being battered by massive tropic-like downpours in various regions, turning city streets into rivers. The latest disasters hit the city of Chelyabinsk, in the Urals, and the Republic of Chechnya, destroying communications and vehicles.
Chechnya is the latest in a string of Russian regions to experience the rage of nature, as heavy rains in the mountains which started on Saturday night have already left over 47,000 people without electricity.
The republic is now extensively using available emergency power supplies, while the weather forecast is negative, promising more heavy rains and hails.
Shortly beforehand, Chelyabinsk – a city in the Urals Mountains with a population over a million – was drenched after a two-hour rainfall poured on to city streets. A thunderstorm combined with wind squalls, causing a series of power cuts.
The local railway station was completely flooded. Outside, knee-deep water left pedestrians housebound and damaged countless cars parked in lowlands.
It follows a similar disaster in Moscow when, on Friday July 13, it was affected by a record rainfall. Three were reportedly killed by lightning, and some of the streets in the capital’s historic center turned into furious streams, sinking dozens of parked cars. In some places the water was about one meter deep.
But evidently, it cannot be compared to the tragedy a week ago when record rainfall caused massive flood in Russia’s southern Krasnodar region on July 7. The wave of water coming from the mountains inflicted massive destruction in the area. According to the latest reports, 172 people lost their lives, while some 35,000 people have been affected by the catastrophe in total. The city of Krymsk was worst hit by the deluge, with Gelenzhik and Novorossiysk also sustaining serious damage.
Over 5,000 houses were devastated by the flood waters in the Krasnodar Region, 4,600 of them in the city of Krymsk. Altogether in the region some 250 houses were completely destroyed. Electricity, water and gas supply was discontinued for several days and locals are still struggling with the aftermath of the catastrophe.
http://www.euronews.com/2012/07/15/freak-tornado-rips-through-poland/
One person has been killed and ten others injured after a freak tornado ripped through northern Poland.
The Baltic region of Pomerania and two neighbouring provinces were the hardest hit.
Buildings were damaged, power lines downed and 400 acres of woodland flattened
Around 1,200 rescuers having been working around the clock to remove fallen trees.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/07/13/us-usa-landslide-alaska-i...
(Reuters) - A huge landslide in an Alaska park that went unnoticed for weeks turns out to have been one of the biggest on record in North America, National Park Service officials said on Thursday.
The slide spread rock and debris about 5.5 miles over a glacier in a remote section of Glacier Bay National Park in southeastern Alaska, officials said.
Unlike other landslides that have occurred in the past in the mountainous park, this event was not triggered by an earthquake, officials said.
"It was detected because of its magnitude, creating its own seismic event," said Lewis Sharman, a Park Service ecologist at Glacier Bay. Records at the U.S. Geological Survey show the event registering as having a magnitude of 3.4.
There were no people in the area at the time, and the slide was not seen until last week, when a Canadian air-taxi pilot flew over the site, said John Quinley, a spokesman for the Park Service's Alaska headquarters.
The slide was far from areas used by park visitors, most of whom tour Glacier Bay by cruise ship, Quinley said.
"You can't see it from a boat or the bay. You've got to be up flying. And it's not on a typical flying route," he said. "It would have been pretty horrific if you'd been camped on the glacier."
Sharman said it is not yet clear what caused the slide, which occurred on a flank of 11,924-foot (3,634-meter) Lituya Mountain. But experts believe that part of the slope simply gave way after repeated freeze-thaw cycles, he said.
Officials are currently trying to estimate the volume of material that fell in the slide, Sharman said.
Fifty-four years ago, there was a fatal landslide in Lituya Bay, which lies at the foot of a glacier flowing from Lituya Mountain.
A July 9, 1958 earthquake registering at magnitude 7.7 loosened massive amounts of rock that dropped into the bay, creating a wave that washed 1,720 feet up the narrow inlet, according to USGS records. Two people on a fishing boat vanished and were presumed dead, and three others on land were killed.
...with three cities in Michigan hitting their hottest temperatures ever recorded. Lansing hit 103°, the hottest day in Michigan's capital city since record keeping began in 1863...
Water temperatures averaged over Lake Michigan are running 11°F (6°C) above average so far in 2012. Image credit: NOAA/GLERL.
Chicago's third consecutive 100°+ day ties record for longest such streak
hit 103° Friday, which was just 2° shy of their official all-time high of 105° set on July 24, 1934...
Historic heat wave in Indiana
"The Indianapolis area is nearing the end of an historic heat wave, the likes the area has not seen in 76 years," said on Friday.
More record-breaking triple-digit heat is expected Saturday across much of the Midwest and Tennessee Valley. All-time highs in Washington D.C. (106°), Pittsburgh (103°), Indianapolis (106°), and Louisville (107°) may be threatened.
Source: http://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/comment.html?entrynum=...
Flooding across the U.K set to stay for years to come (6 July 2012)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-18744189
Torrential downpours have been causing disruption in parts of the UK with a month's worth of rain forecast to fall in 24 hours in some areas.
In many towns, people have been battling to stop rising water entering their homes.
Dr Claire Goodess, Senior Researcher in Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia, says over the next few decades there will be an increase in heavy rainfall events.
SNOW IN JULY SURPRISED PEOPLE, RIZE/TURKEY
Mountain climbers surprised with July snow on altitude of 2500 meters, which lasted until noon. They said this is not expected and really surprising. Source
Authorities said record heat on Monday continued to scorch the eastern section of the U.S., while an estimated 2 million people in the region remain without power because of the fierce storms on Friday night.
On Monday, the National Weather Service reported that the heat is poised to prevail over large areas from the plains to the Atlantic Coast over the next couple of days. In Washington, D.C. temperatures were expected to break all-time records, exceeding 38 degrees Celsius.
Over the past weekend, more than two dozen cities throughout the region broke their high temperature records, including Charlotte of North Carolina, Columbia of South Carolina and Knoxville of Tennessee. To complicate matters, the weekend storms rendered 2 million people without power. Authorities said the extensive damage to power grids could take days to repair. The affected states range from North Carolina to New Jersey and then as far west as Illinois.
Government units have declared emergencies in Washington, D.C., Ohio, Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia. A total of 18 people perished in the storms. Source
Following on from last week's confirmation that the last quarter was the wettest in the UK since records began. It has now been confirmed that the month of June was the wettest on record.
Wettest June on record Met Office figures show
Last month was the UK's wettest June since records began in 1910. It was also the second dullest on record with 119.2 hours of sunshine. Total UK rainfall was 145.3mm - more than twice as much as normally expected.
The Balkans are experiencing very high, almost tropical temperatures, Višegrad in Bosnia reached 42 C, the hottest town in Europe. Some places in Montenegro up to 40 C. Temperatures are expected to rise even more, up to the middle of this week. In Mostar 32 C were recorded at 22:00 in the evening, the hottest temperature for that time ever.
In Croatia in Knin, 39 C in the shade, other places from 31 C to 37 C.
Slovenia, temperatures are 35 C and above, some places crossed 37 C.
Serbia, mostly 33 C to 38 across the country.
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