"And I beheld, and heard the voice of one eagle flying through the midst of heaven, saying with a loud voice: Woe, woe, woe to the inhabitants of the earth.... [Apocalypse (Revelation) 8:13]
Tuesday, April 11, 2017
Planet X Incoming: US weather disasters 2017: Double than average and costing USA record-breaking $5 billions already
Planet X Incoming: US weather disasters 2017: Double than average and costing USA record-breaking $5 billions already
In addition, Extremely bright green fireball lights up the
sky over much of San Diego and Los Angeles, California, Arizona, Nevada
and New Mexico (videos)
The U.S. has endured a destructive start to 2017 from the multiple
severe weather outbreaks since January. There have been 5,372
preliminary reports of severe weather across the United States in 2017
through April 8.
This is more than than double the average of 2,274 for the same
period of time during the past 10 years (2007-2016). In that decade,
only 2008 had about the same number of severe weather reports by this
point in the year with 5,242.
The animation below shows how the occurrences of wind damage, large
hail and tornadoes have piled up month-by-month this year. Portions of
the South have been hit the hardest, but the Midwest has also seen a
high concentration of severe weather reports.
2017 Off to Destructive Start: Severe Weather Reports Tally 5,000+, More Than Double the AverageThis year has also been unusual in how far north severe weather, including tornadoes, has occurred for so early in the year:
Massachusetts was hit by two EF1 tornadoes Feb. 25, one near Conway
and another near Goshen. No other February tornadoes are known to have
struck the state during that month in the historical record.
Just over a week later, Minnesota experienced a similar rare
early-season event when severe thunderstorms spawned three EF1 tornadoes
March 6. Those were the earliest known twisters for a calendar year in
the state by nearly two weeks.
Extremely bright green fireball lights up the
sky over much of San Diego and Los Angeles, California, Arizona, Nevada
and New Mexico (videos)
For a few seconds on Monday, night turned into day as an extremely
bright green fireball lit the sky over much of California, Los Angeles,
Arizona, Nevada and New Mexico, blinding all-sky meteor cameras.
The AMS has received 295 reports so far (and counting…) about of a
fireball event seen over San Diego, CA on Monday, April 10th 2017 around
9:00pm PDT (April 11th – 04:00 UT.).
11 of the reports mentioned sound associated with the sky event while 76 reported fragmentation.
Here a map showing the trajectory of the space rock:
The major meteor sighting on April 10, 2017, was concentrated around San Diego, California. via AMS Meteor
And where the reports were coming from:
The
meteor was primarily seen from the San Diego and Los Angeles,
California but people from Nevada, Arizona, and New Mexico also reported
seeing it. via AMS
The fireball was seen primarily from the San Diego area but witnesses
from Los Angeles, Arizona, Nevada and New Mexico also reported the
event.