"We warned at the start of ZetaTalk, in 1995, thatunpredictable 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 Artic regions, with the violence of storms increasing in number and ferocity."
The wobble seems to have changed, as the temperature in Europe suddenly plunged after being like an early Spring, Alaska has its coldest temps ever while the US and much of Canada is having an extremely mild winter. India went from fatal cold spell to balmy again. Has the Earth changed position vs a vs Planet X to cause this?[and from another]Bitter cold records broken in Alaska - all time coldest record nearly broken, but Murphy's Law intervenes[Jan 30]http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/01/30/bitter-cold-records-broken-in-alaskaJim River, AK closed in on the all time record coldest temperature of -80°F set in 1971, which is not only the Alaska all-time record, but the record for the entire United States. Unfortunately, it seems the battery died in the weather station just at the critical moment. While the continental USA has a mild winter and has set a number of high temperature records in the last week and pundits ponder whether they will be blaming the dreaded "global warming" for those temperatures, Alaska and Canada have been suffering through some of the coldest temperatures on record during the last week.
There has been no change in the wobble pattern, the wobble has merely become more severe. Nancy noted a Figure 8 format when the Earth wobble first became noticeable, in early 2005, after Planet X moved into the inner solar system at the end of 2003. The Figure 8 shifted along to the east a bit on the globe between 2005 and 2009, (the last time Nancy took its measure) as Planet X came closer to the Earth, encountering the magnetic N Pole with a violent push earlier in the day. But the pattern of the Figure 8 remained essentially the same. So what changed recently that the weather patterns became noticeably different in late January, 2012?
The N Pole is pushed away when it comes over the horizon, when the noon Sun is centered over the Pacific. This regularly puts Alaska under colder air, with less sunlight, and thus the historically low temps there this January, 2012 as the wobble has gotten stronger. But by the time the Sun is positioned over India, the N Pole has swung during the Figure 8 so the globe tilts, and this tilt is visible in the weather maps from Asia. The tilt has forced the globe under the hot air closer to the Equator, warming the land along a discernable tilt demarcation line.
The next loop of the Figure 8 swings the globe so that the N Pole moves in the other direction, putting the globe again at a tilt but this time in the other direction. This tilt is discernable in weather maps of Europe, again along a diagonal line. Depending upon air pressure and temperature differences, the weather on either side of this diagonal line may be suddenly warm or suddenly cold. The tilt and diagonal line lingers to affect much of the US and Canada, but the Figure 8 changes at this point to be an up and down motion, pulling the geographic N Pole south so the US is experiencing a warmer than expected winter under a stronger Sun. Then the cycle repeats, with the magnetic N Pole of Earth pushed violently away again as the Sun is positioned over the Pacific.
Would the Zetas be able to let us know what is causing the early break-up of the Arctic Ice, the ice seems to have taken on a swirling pattern at the same time, would this be wobble related?[and from another]http://www.vancouversun.com/news/national/Canada+Arctic+cracks+spec... The ice in Canada’s western Arctic ripped open in a massive “fracturing event” this spring that spread like a wave across 1,000 kilometres of the Beaufort Sea. Huge leads of water – some more than 500 kilometres long and as much as 70 kilometres across – opened up from Alaska to Canada’s Arctic islands as the massive ice sheet cracked as it was pushed around by strong winds and currents. It took just seven days for the fractures to progress across the entire area from west to east.[and from another]http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=80752&src=iot... A high-pressure weather system was parked over the region, producing warmer temperatures and winds that flowed in a southwesterly direction. That fueled the Beaufort Gyre, a wind-driven ocean current that flows clockwise. The gyre was the key force pulling pieces of ice west past Point Barrow, the northern nub of Alaska that protrudes into the Beaufort Sea.
The Figure 8 formed by the N Pole during the daily Earth wobble has shifted somewhat to the East, due to Planet X positioned more to the right of the Earth during its approach. This was anticipated, and well described in ZetaTalk, the Earth crowding to the left in the cup to escape the approach of Planet X, so the angle between these two planets would change slightly. This shift of the Figure 8 to the East is due to the push against the Earth’s magnetic N Pole occurring sooner each day than prior. Thus instead of occurring when the Sun is high over the Pacific, over New Zealand, it is now occurring when the Sun is high over Alaska. All the wobble points have shifted eastward accordingly.
This has brought a lingering Winter to the western US, and a changed sloshing pattern to the Arctic waters. Instead of Pacific waters being pushed through the Bering Straits into the Arctic when the polar push occurs, the wobble is swinging the Arctic to the right, and then later to the left, creating a circular motion in the waters trapped in the Arctic. Since the Earth rotates counterclockwise, the motion also takes this path. This is yet another piece of evidence that the establishment is hard pressed to explain. They are attempting to ascribe this to high pressure and wind, all of which are not new to the Arctic, but this circular early breakup of ice in the Arctic is new.
RAWALPINDI/PESHAWAR: Massive rain and windstorms on Wednesday evening hit Rawalpindi, Islamabad, Peshawar, Lahore and some other parts of the country, killing at least 15 persons as walls and roofs collapsed while billboards and trees were uprooted. As many as 75 persons were also injured in the windstorm.
Electricity vanished in the twin cities of Rawalpindi and Islamabad and most parts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa after some pylons fell due to the storm. The Metro bus station’s roof at the 6th Road, Rawalpindi, collapsed and the bus service was suspended. The flight operation at the Benazir Bhutto International Airport in Islamabad was also suspended due to the windstorm.
According to the Met Office, the wind was blowing in Rawalpindi at 148 kilometres per hour and in Islamabad it was 120 km/hr.A woman and her two daughters died in Margalla Town, a madrassa student lost his life in Sector F-7 and a man was killed in Bhara Kahu due to the windstorm in Islamabad.
In the Dhoke Hassu area, Rawalpindi, Kanwal, 20, and her 18-year-old brother Majid died in a wall collapse while their mother Sultana received injuries. In the Banni area, Azhar Mahmood lost his life.
Also, at least seven persons were killed and over 40 others wounded when a windstorm and rain hit parts of KP and tribal areas on Wednesday.The powerful thunderstorm followed by heavy rain hit the provincial capital and nearby towns at around 6:30pm. Several walls and roofs collapsed while trees fell due to the heavy rain and storm.
Sidra, a young woman, and her six-month baby Ahmad, died in rain-related incidents in the Musazai village. Two members of the family, Ambreen and Nosheen, were wounded and shifted to hospital.
An emergency was declared in all the city hospitals while ambulances of Rescue 1122 were moved to rush the wounded for treatment.
“A mother and her child were killed in Musazai, Peshawar, while two others in the family sustained injuries when the roof of their house caved in. Another person was killed in Nowshera while one died in Charsadda,” Bilal Ahmad Faizi, the spokesman for Rescue 1122, told The News.
He added that as many as 23 persons sustained injuries in various rain and storm-related incidents in Peshawar, Charsadda and Nowshera.
A woman was killed and three others wounded in rain-related incidents in Jamrud Tehsil while a man died in the Bara Tehsil of the Khyber Agency. One person reportedly died in Kohat. Unconfirmed reports said a child reportedly died on the Kohat Road. A large number of hoardings and trees also fell to the ground due to the powerful storm.
In Nowshera, one person was killed and several others injured in house collapse incidents. A man identified as Ihsan Ali was killed when a tree fell on him in Misri Banda. The Grand Trunk Road was closed for traffic after signboards, trees and electricity poles were uprooted which blocked the road.
The sources said that boundary walls of several houses in Nowshera Kalan, Risalpur and Mera Jalozai collapsed, leaving several persons injured. Scores of injured were shifted to the District Headquarters Hospital and other hospitals in the district. There were reports of damage to the crops in different areas of Pabbi tehsil of Nowshera district.
Hailstorm severely damaged the standing crops and fruit orchards spreading on large swathes of land in South Waziristan. According to local sources, the hailstorm broke a 30-year-old record. It also uprooted the solar systems the tribesmen had installed to generate power to run the tube-wells. According to the reports received from various parts of the tribal region, the most affected areas were Karikot, Landi Doog, Waja Ghundai, Sherna, Sekach, Tala Bani, Laman, Dubkot, Tanai, Warsak, Wacha Khwar and Greendana. One person identified as Bakht Jan was killed in a wall collapse incident in Sadda, Kurram Agency.
Seven departments remain vigilant rain and / or flooding.A red alert is issued Loiret, due to an exceptional flood of the Loing.
The amount of water fallen in recent hours is impressive: in two days, 86 millimeters to Voulton, in Seine-et-Marne, while 65 millimeters were recorded in Trappes, in Yvelines, in one day.
A Montbouy, Loiret town, the river reached a height of 2.1 meters on Tuesday, surpassing the previous record of 1.85 meters recorded in 1910.
The water rose up to a meter in places in Bruay and neighboring towns, according to the prefecture.
Heavy rains cause deadly flooding in southern Germany
An estimated three people have been killed as violent weather strikes the southwestern German state of Baden-Württemberg. Heavy rain caused an underground car park to collapse.
Much of the destruction is centered in the town of Schwäbisch Gmünd in the East Württemberg region. Authorities said a volunteer firefighter was killed while trying to rescue a flooding victim - the man he was trying to save is listed as missing.
Separately, police said one person died in an underground car park in the town of Weißbach after it became flooded with rainwater.
The storm was reportedly centered in the Ostalb district near the state border with Bavaria. Numerous vehicles were reportedly underwater and emergency services had to rescue stranded motorists from their vehicles.
Rescue workers assisting stranded residents on May 30 as heavy flooding hit Schwäbisch Gmünd
Ten children and an adult were injured in Paris after being hit by lightning while celebrating a birthday in the park Monceau, located in the northwest area of the French capital, not far from the Champs-Elysees.
The head of the eighth arrondissement of Paris, Vincent Baladi, told the TV itele that six children were in serious condition.
The incident, very rare, occurred during one of the frequent storms of recent days, which prompted the group to take shelter under a tree. No one was hurt from the tree fall and according to the fire department "has been avoided a more serious drama."
The weather service had issued a warning for severe weather coming rainy, but Paris - which has hit a violent storm - was not among its current locations.
--------------------------------- Storm killer in Europe, lightning on children playing in Germany and on a holiday in Paris
May 28, 2016
Bad weather in Europe, killer lightning between Germany, Poland and France
The tornado that raked northern Kansas stayed on the ground about 10 times longer than the typical twister.
A tornado drops two mile northeast of Niles, Kan., on Wednesday. The large tornado that the National Weather Service said was on the ground for about 90 minutes damaged or destroyed about 20 homes in northern Kansas.
Lightning from a severe storm fills the sky behind a grain elevator in Belvue, Kan., on Wednesday. The storm produced tornadoes near Chapman.
The Storm Prediction Center said most tornadoes last less than 10 minutes and stay on the ground for about 31/2 miles. Wednesday’s storm covered 26 miles from near Niles and southeast of Chapman, but was moving so slowly it lasted an hour and a half and was so isolated that other storms never interrupted its air flow.
The SPC said the legendary, long-lived tornadoes talked about from a century ago were most likely a series of storms along one general path.
The twister that hit Kansas tracked eastward at an average speed of 17.3 mph. The slow forward motion gave forecasters plenty of time to warn people living in the area to either get out of the storm’s way or take shelter.
The National Weather Service at Topeka warned Chapman’s 1,400 residents at 8:06 p.m. Wednesday that the storm was 4 miles west. At the storm’s pace, that gave people 15 minutes to prepare. There have been no reports of injuries or deaths.
Tornadoes are usually part of weather systems that form multiple storms – one with hail here, high winds there. Cold air flowing out of those other storms often chokes off the balance a storm needs to keep a tornado going, said Erik Rasmussen, a research scientist at the University of Oklahoma and the project director for Vortex Southeast.
“The things that end up destroying a tornado didn’t happen,” Rasmussen said. “It was really just bad luck.” The next-nearest storm capable of influencing the Chapman twister was south of Wichita, Kansas, 120 miles to the south.
Tornadoes are the most efficient way to move air from one part of the atmosphere to another. Typically in the U.S., tornadoes form when moist, warm air from the Gulf moves northward on air currents to meet drier, cooler air moving in from the Pacific or Canada.
Comment by jorge namour on May 27, 2016 at 10:17pm
Hurricane cinema Film: Trailer
News - Published Friday, May 27, 2016 by The Weather Channel- LA CHAINE METEO
A FRENCH FILM
Check out the trailer for the film "Hurricane" comes out in cinemas Wednesday, June 8
Filmed with images from 12 countries, the film chronicles the journey of over 15,000 km of one of the most devastating weather events on our planet: the hurricane.
(CNN)India recorded its highest-ever temperature on Thursday when the heat in the town of Phalodi, in the western state of Rajasthan, shot up to a burning 51 degrees Celsius (123.8 degrees Fahrenheit).
It was the second day in a row the town experienced temperatures in excess of 50 degrees Celsius.
Other towns in the state, such as Churu, also recorded highs of about 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit) the same day.
In New Delhi, the capital, the temperature reached nearly 47 degrees Celsius on Wednesday.
The previous temperature record in India was held by Alwar, also in Rajasthan, at 50.6 degrees Celsius (123.1 Fahrenheit) in 1956. According to the Guinness Book of World Records, the highest temperature ever was recorded at 56.7 degrees Celsius (134 degrees Fahrenheit) in Death Valley, California, on July 10, 1913.
Rajasthan, home to the Thar desert, typically records the highest temperatures in India. Temperatures can soar as a result of incoming western winds from hot areas.
Red alert issued
The IMD has issued a red-level alert for Rajasthan as well as for other states like Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat, where temperatures, despite not having crossed the 50-degree mark, are higher than average.
India has recorded higher than normal temperatures throughout 2016.
Many areas are experiencing severe heat waves and state governments estimate more than 370 people killed so far.
ndia recorded its highest ever temperature on Thursday, in Phalodi, Rajasthan, where numbers shot up to a burning 51 degrees Celsius (123.8 degrees Fahrenheit)
This comes on the back of a searing 2015, when more than 2,500 died in the summer. 2015's high casualty rate has led to India's National Disaster Management Authority coordinating with states on heat wave action plans to spread awareness and establish preventative measures.
Heatwave hits India amid worst drought in decades02:03
The heat wave has also coincided with another major environmental problem: drought.
After two successive below-average monsoons in 2014 and 2015, ground water levels have receded, impacting many rural Indians who rely on ground wells for drinking water.
The western Indian state of Maharashtra is one of the worst impacted, with the state government organizing emergency 'water trains' to bring daily supplies to villages.
The double whammy of heat and drought has led to accidents and fatalities.
On Monday, five men died in the northern state of Haryana when they attempted to restore a well that had fallen into disuse.
Authorities say the men were killed when they inhaled poisonous gas trapped in the well.
India's meteorological department says the heat wave will continue into next week
India's meteorological department says the heat wave will continue into next week. Many schools across the country have been operating on shortened days.
The monsoons are expected to hit India in June, bringing much-needed rain and relief. The 2016 monsoons are forecast to bring an above-average amount of rainfall.
Unrelated to the annual monsoons, large parts of Sri Lanka and now southern India have been lashed this week by rains caused by a tropical depression in the Bay of Bengal.
Caught on camera: A dangerous, melting road in Gujarat
A rare tornado swept across Minden on May 22, 2016 at 7:30pm local time.
The extreme thunderstorm went down on the Minden-Lübbecke with heavy rain, high winds and hail. The strong thunderstorm particularly hit the towns of Minden, Porta Westfalica, Bad Oeynhausen and Peter Hagen hard. Of these, a total of 33 persons were affected no one was injured.
The district Minden-Meissen was hit by a tornado on May 22, 2016.
The strong thunderstorm particularly hit the towns of Minden, Porta Westfalica, Bad Oeynhausen and Peter Hagen hard.
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