Category: Extreme Weather


The Oklahoman, NewsOk.com

A teacher hugs a child at Briarwood Elementary school after a tornado destroyed the school in south Oklahoma City, Monday, May 20, 2013.

By Suzanne Choney, Contributing Writer, NBC News

The loss of life and stunning devastation in Oklahoma City suburbs after a monster tornado ripped through the area are heart-wrenching. “The streets are just gone. The signs are just gone,” said Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, after she toured the area by helicopter Tuesday. And many, many relief organizations are getting the message out on how to help.

American Red Cross
The Red Cross has set up shelters in various communities. You can donate to the Red Cross Disaster Relief fund here, and the organization also suggests giving blood at your local hospital or blood bank. Fundraising efforts were buoyed Tuesday by a $1 million pledge from Kevin Durant, of the Oklahoma City Thunder basketball team, via his family foundation.

If you’re searching for a missing relative, check Red Cross Safe & Well’s site. And please register if you’re within the disaster region. The site is designed to make communication easier after a tragedy like this.

If you want to send a $10 donation to the Disaster Relief fund via text message, you can do so by texting the word REDCROSS to 90999. As in the case with other donations via mobile, the donation will show up on your wireless bill, or be deducted from your balance if you have a prepaid phone. You need to be 18 or older, or have parental permission, to donate this way. (If you change your mind, text the word STOP to 90999.)

The Red Cross also accepts frequent flier miles as donations. Delta, United Airlines and US Airways partner with the Red Cross throughout the year, which uses miles to help get volunteers and staff to key locations during disasters. (Note: The donation is not tax-deductible as the IRS considers it a gift.) For Delta, email: delta.bids@delta-air.com with your SkyMiles number, the number of miles you want to donate, and specify the Red Cross as the charity. You can donate miles online at United Airlines Donate Your Miles and US Airways Dividend Miles.

Phone: 1-800-RED CROSS (1-800-733-2767); for Spanish speakers, 1-800-257-7575; for TDD, 1-800-220-4095.

OK Strong Disaster Relief Fund
The state of Oklahoma, coordinating with the United Way of Central Oklahoma, on Tuesday established the OK Strong Disaster Relief Fund to help “with the long-term medical, emotional and educational needs of victims of the May 20 tornado in Moore and the May 19 tornado near Shawnee.”

Donations can be made online at UnitedWayOKC.org.

Phone: 1-405-236-8441.

Regional Food Bank of Oklahoma
The Regional Food Bank of Oklahoma, working with the Oklahoma Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster, is seeking monetary donations. To donate, visit the regional food bank’s website, or give $10 by texting the word FOOD to 32333.

Phone: 1-405-972-1111

Oklahoma Baptist Disaster Relief
This organization says donations will “go straight to help those in need providing tree removal services, laundry services and meals to victims of disasters.”

It is requesting monetary donations (It says clothing is NOT needed). For more information, and to donate, visit Oklahoma Baptist Disaster Relief’s website.

You can send checks to: BGCO, Attn: Disaster Relief, 3800 N. May Ave., Oklahoma City, OK., 73112.

Salvation Army
The Salvation Army is organizing disaster response units to serve hard-hit areas in central Oklahoma, including Moore, where it is sending mobile kitchens that can serve meals to 2,500 people a day, and to South Oklahoma City.

In Little Axe, Okla., the organization said, the army’s Central Oklahoma Area Command Disaster Service Unit was busy feeding breakfast, lunch and dinner to people, “even as one of our Salvation Army family member’s home was destroyed.”

Supporters can donate online via the organization’s website, SalvationArmyUSA.org. You can also text the word STORM to 80888 to make a $10 donation via cellphone.

If you want to send a check, the Salvation Army asks that you put the words “Oklahoma Tornado Relief” on the check, and mail it to: The Salvation Army, P.O. Box 12600, Oklahoma City, OK., 73157.

Phone:  1-800-SAL-ARMY (1-800-725-2769).

Feed the Children
Feed the Children has set up five locations in Oklahoma City to accept donations to help victims of the Moore tornado. The organization is accepting items including diapers, canned goods, non-perishable food, snack items, water and sports drinks. The organization is also supporting mobile canteens in partnership with the Salvation Army and the Red Cross.

You can donate online, or make a $10 donation by texting the word DISASTER to 80888.

Phone:  1-800-627-4556

United Way of Central Oklahoma
A disaster relief fund is being activated as of May 21 so that individuals can specifically donate to tornado relief-and-recovery efforts, the organization says on its site.

“Financial contributions are the best way to help unless otherwise requested.” Donations can be made online at

United Way of Central Oklahoma’s Disaster Relief Fund is open.  Donations may be made online here. Checks, with a notation of “May Tornado Relief” can also be sent to the United Way of Central Oklahoma, P.O. Box 837, Oklahoma City, OK , 73101.

Feeding America
Through its network of more than 200 food banks, Feeding America, whose mission is to “feed America’s hungry through a nationwide network of member food banks,” says it will deliver truckloads of food, water and supplies to communities in need, in Oklahoma, and will also “set up additional emergency food and supply distribution sites as they are needed.” You can donate online here.

Phone: 1-800-910-5524.

Operation USA
The international relief group, based in Los Angeles, says it is “readying essential material aid — emergency, shelter and cleaning supplies” to help Oklahoma’s community health organizations and schools recover.

You can donate online here. You can also give a $10 donation by texting the word AID to 50555. Checks should be sent to: Operation USA, 7421 Beverly Blvd., PH, Los Angeles, CA 90036

Phone: 1-800-678-7255.

Convoy of Hope
The Missouri-based nonprofit organization has done work in other disasters, including the Haiti earthquake, with a mission of getting food and water to those after disaster strikes. Now it’s doing the same for Moore, Okla. You can donate online here. Convoy of Hope is also going the crowd-sourced route, using HopeMob, a site similar to Kickstarter but for raising money to help disaster victims and others in need, which charges no fees to the organizations that use it. Convoy of Hope’s goal on the site is to raise $15,000 in seven days to help Moore.

“Why 7 days? In these first 7 days the town of Moore, OK will be consumed with clearing out destruction and accessing their needs,” HopeMob says on its site. “Once those needs are known we want to be able to give them the funds to help them rebuild in the long term.”

Phone: 1-800-988-0664

 

Read Full Article Here

 

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Oklahoma tornado: How to find people, pets

Google

Google’s Crisis Response Center provides information and compiles resources to aid tornado survivors and their loved ones.

By Rosa Golijan

In the aftermath of one of the deadliest tornadoes in U.S. history, many are desperately trying to reach loved ones in areas affected by the disastrous event. Google and the Red Cross are helping confirm the safety of tornado survivors, while the Oklahoma Humane Society and Reddit users band together to take care of missing pets.

Google Crisis Response Center and Person Finder
Google has set up a Crisis Response Center page on which it provides shelter information, weather reports, public alerts and links to a variety of resources to aid those in or around the towns of Moore, Newcastle and southern portions of Oklahoma City. The search giant has also enabled the Google Person Finder tool at a plain and simple-to-use site for sharing and gathering information about those missing after the tornado. The tool was originally created after the 2010 Haiti earthquake.

 As with previous versions of the tool, all someone needs to do is enter as much of a person’s name as he or she knows and Google will provide any related information — including last known location, physical descriptions, last reported status and messages left by those searching for the individual.

Those seeking to add information to the database will need to provide the full name of the individual they’ve got information about, as well as their own names and e-mail addresses.

 

Read Full Article Here

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May 20th 2013 tornado

Attila1487 Attila1487

Published on May 20, 2013

This video was uploaded from an Android phone.

 

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Destroyed vehicles lie in the rubble outside the Plaza Towers Elementary school in Moore, Okla., on Tuesday.

As evening drew to a close in Oklahoma, after a day of tireless searching for survivors among the debris left behind by a powerful tornado, officials said the operation could end by nightfall Tuesday.

“We will be through every damaged piece of property in this city at least three times before we’re done and we hope to be done by dark tonight,” Moore Fire Chief Gary Bird said at a news conference.

Emergency crews and National Guard troops picked through neighborhoods without recognizable streets in a grim, house-by-house search of the blasted-out husk of a city left behind by the ferocious tornado.

Authorities lowered the death toll to 24, less than half the figure they gave in the initial chaos after the twister, but there was still no full accounting of those missing. Nine of the confirmed dead were children, including seven in a flattened elementary school.

Four bodies were recovered, including a 3-month-old baby, at a local 7-Eleven.

Working with search dogs and under menacing skies, the crews meticulously combed the rubble in the Oklahoma City suburb of Moore, which took a direct hit when the tornado cut a 17-mile path of destruction on Monday afternoon.

Dozens of people were pulled from the wreckage in the initial hours after the storm, but there were no reports of additional survivors found Tuesday — only scraps of wood, shreds of clothing, shards of glass and metal and cars crumpled into each other and into buildings. Entire stretches of Moore looked as if they had been put through a blender.

“I mean, there’s nothing,” said Robert Foster, whose family home was destroyed. “People are walking up and down the streets. It’s really upsetting to look at. We grew up there. That’s our whole childhood. And it’s all flattened now.”

Gov. Mary Fallin said there were 237 injured, but authorities cautioned that figure and the death toll could still rise. Even with the benefit of a full day’s light, people were only beginning to grasp the scope of the destruction in Moore and parts of Oklahoma City.

The Oklahoma University Medical Center admitted 59 children and 34 adults.

The National Weather Service said survey crews had found at least one area of Category EF5 damage — the highest classification for tornadoes, meaning winds had exceeded 200 mph.

Frank Keating, a former Oklahoma governor, said on MSNBC that as many as 20,000 families could be displaced.

“This was the storm of storms,” Oklahoma City Mayor Mick Cornett said.

The first of the victims was publicly identified — Ja’Nae Hornsby, a third-grader who was killed when the tornado demolished Plaza Towers Elementary School. She was remembered by her family Tuesday as full of joy and fond of playing dress-up. Her relatives gathered at a Baptist church in Oklahoma City to console each other.

A second victim, Hemant Bhonde, 65, became separated from his wife when the tornado struck their home, his family told NBC News. Bhonde’s body was recovered Tuesday, hospital officials said. His wife survived.

Tannen Maury / EPA

Firefighters examine the rubble of a home in a destroyed neighborhood in Moore.

As they took the measure of what they had lost, people in Moore also marveled that they were alive, and began to share stories of survival and of how they protected each other when the twister struck, announcing itself with roaring wind.

Children from Plaza Towers Elementary School, where seven children were reported drowned in a pool of water, told of hearing sirens and running into a hall for cover, some still carrying their math books.

A teacher, Rhonda Crosswhite, said she huddled with students in a bathroom stall and draped herself over them for cover as the storm hit.

“One of my little boys, he just kept saying, ‘I love you, I love you, please don’t die with me, please don’t die with me,’” she told TODAY. “But we’re OK. And we made it out, and it finally stopped.”

She said all her students were accounted for.

 

Read Full Article here

 

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Okla. school survivor: Teacher threw herself over us and ‘saved our lives’

Scott Stump TODAY

17 hours ago

Video: Brandi Kline and her two sons, both students at Plaza Towers Elementary in Moore, Okla., which was directly hit by the tornado Monday afternoon, recount their experiences, as Damian Britton says his teacher threw her body over him and his classmates to shield them from the storm.

A fourth-grader at a school that took a direct hit from Monday’s deadly tornado in Moore, Okla., described the heroic actions of a teacher who saved his life and others by covering several students with her body to shield them from the storm.

Damian Britton, a student at Plaza Towers Elementary School, recounted a harrowing scene to Savannah Guthrie on TODAY Tuesday. He also had an emotional reunion with Rhonda Crosswhite, the sixth-grade teacher he credited with saving his life.

He was in class when he heard the sirens go off, warning of tornadoes that touched down a little before 3 p.m. with winds up to 200 miles per hour. The twisters tore through the suburbs of Oklahoma City, leaving 24 confirmed dead as rescue workers continue to search through the rubble.

“We heard the sirens go off and then we all ran into the hallway,’’ Damian said. “Some of us had a math book and some of us had our backpacks. (The sirens) went off again, and we ducked again. They went off again, and then we heard the tornado and it sounded like a train coming by, and then we were all in cover.”

Crosswhite laid down on Damian and several other students in a bathroom stall as the tornado hit.

“She was covering me and my friend Zachary,” he said. “I told her we were fine because we were holding on to something, and then she went over to my friend Antonio and covered him, so she saved our lives.”

Video: Rhonda Crosswhite, a teacher at Plaza Towers Elementary School in Moore, Okla., describes covering her students with her body to protect them from the tornado that devastated the school.

The teacher and student were reunited on Tuesday, sharing a tight embrace along with Damian’s mother, Brandi Kline.

“I told you we were going to be OK,” Crosswhite said as she hugged Damian.

Crosswhite described how she tried to protect the children and keep them calm in the midst of the chaos.

“I was in a stall with some kids and it just started coming down, so I laid on top of them,” she told Guthrie. “One of my little boys just kept saying, ‘I love you, I love you, please don’t die with me.’

“I never thought I was going to die. The whole time I just kept screaming to them, ‘Quit worrying; we’re fine, we’re fine.’ And I’m very loud, so I just hoped they could hear me because I could hear them screaming. (One girl) was sobbing, and I was like, ‘We’re going to be fine, we’re going to be fine, I’m protecting you.’ And then I said a few prayers. ‘God please take care of my kids.”’

All of the children who were with her are accounted for and unscathed other than a minor injury. Crosswhite was wearing flip-flops and suffered cuts on her feet, but is otherwise in good condition.

'I told you you were going to be OK,' teacher Rhonda Crosswhite told Damian Britton as she reunited with him.

TODAY
“I told you you were going to be OK,” teacher Rhonda Crosswhite told Damian Britton as she reunited with him.

“It was like a freight train, but I don’t remember much about it,” she said about the sound of the tornado. “It felt like someone was beating me up from behind. The stuff was just coming down on my back. I have cuts everywhere that I didn’t even realize I had.”

Damian estimated that it took about five minutes for the twister to pass through before the students emerged from cover to survey the damage and check on their classmates.

“It was just a disaster,’’ he said. There was just a bunch of stuff thrown around and the cars were tipped over, and it smelled like gas.”

Bobby Britton, Damian’s brother and a student in Crosswhite’s sixth-grade class, was with other students taking cover in the girls’ bathroom.

“I could see the debris flying over, and it sounded like a train,’’ Bobby said. “(I was) scared.”

Kline was at work and was sent to the basement when the tornado warnings sounded. She raced to the school as soon as her area was declared safe.

“About 45 minutes later, (my children) got ahold of me on their cell phones, but it was panic until then,’’ Kline said. “I got as close as I could (to the school) and then just had to walk. Then we went to our house, which was nearby, and most of it’s gone. Everyone around lost everything, but we have our kids.

 

Read Full Article and Watch Videos Here

AssociatedPress AssociatedPress

Published on May 21, 2013

Workers raced Tuesday to complete the search for survivors and the dead in the Oklahoma City suburb where a mammoth tornado claimed 24 lives. Scientists concluded the storm was a rare and extraordinarily powerful type of twister known as an EF5. (May 21)

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Silver lining: Family digs dogs out of rubble

Kael Alford/NBC News

Leslie Hendricks, 27, and her father, Levi Hendricks Sr., 53, hold their dogs they rescued from the rubble of their house in Moore, Okla., on Tuesday.

By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

MOORE, Okla. – In the rubble of their flattened home, under a car and in a smashed kennel, were the two remaining members of the Hendricks’ family: a pair of chihuahuas, Lola and Louie, who survived the monster tornado that struck this Oklahoma town.

Levi, his wife Alice and two of their adult children rushed to their home early Tuesday to this tornado-torn corner of Moore to find their beloved dogs. Cadaver dogs checking their neighbor’s house swooped into help.

The Hendricks had found Wiley, their doberman, and Gaby, their boxer, in the backyard earlier. They were under a pile of debris, nestled under the apparent shelter of a picnic table.

“They come out with not a scratch … they were perfectly protected,” Levi said.

But the chihuahuas were stuck inside the house when the killer twister roared through Moore. Lola and Louie were trapped.

Ed Zurga / EPA

A monster tornado hit Moore, Okla., Monday afternoon, leaving at least 24 people dead as the threat of further storms continues.

“They could hear whining and that’s how we pinpointed where they were at and started digging at that point,” Levi said, at times wiping at tears.

Read Full Article Here

 

Courtesy Angela Hornsby

Ja’Nae Hornsby, 9, (right) with her cousin Taylor, 14, in a photo taken over the weekend.

A 9-year-old girl who was “always smiling” is among the first of the Oklahoma tornado victims to be identified.

Third-grader Ja’Nae Hornsby was one of the students who perished when the twister demolished Plaza Towers Elementary School in Moore, Okla. on Monday afternoon.

Members of her grieving family gathered Tuesday at a Baptist church in Oklahoma City to console each other after a night of anxious waiting ended with a hope-shattering call from the medical examiner’s office.

Her aunt, Angela Hornsby, said Ja’Nae had spent last weekend at her house, playing with her cousins and “doing what little girls do.”

 

“They like to play dress-up,” she recalled. “My daughter puts jewelry on them and I took pictures of them dancing together and they took video. They were just happy.

“She was always happy, always smiling.”

Courtesy Angela Hornsby

Ja’Nae Hornsby, 9, with her 2-year-old sister Jia, in a photo taken over the weekend.

On Monday, Ja’Nae went off to Plaza Towers Elementary School while her father, Joshua, headed into Oklahoma City for work.

As the tornado bore down on the suburb of Moore just before dismissal time, the father of two tried to race back home to get Ja’Nae from school and his two-year-old, Jia, from daycare, Angela Hornsby said.

The highways were jammed, though, and by the time he got to Moore, the grade school had been reduced to a pile of rubble, its parking lot transformed into a triage area for surviving students being pulled from the debris.

There was no sign of Ja’Nae, though. Her father and other relatives shuttled from shelter to shelter, “looking for answers,” Angela Hornsby said. She dialed all the hospitals that had taken the injured but could not find her niece.

 

Read Full Article Here

 

Benjamin Krain / Getty Images
An aerial view shows destroyed houses and buildings on May 21 in Moore, Okla.

Joshua Lott / AFP – Getty Images
A woman and young boy walk along a street and view destroyed houses on May 21 in Moore, Okla.

Jewel Samad / AFP – Getty Images
A man salvages items from what is left of a bedroom of his home on May 21 in Moore, Okla.

Earth Watch Report  -  Extreme Weather

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20.05.2013 Heat Wave India Capital City, New Delhi Damage level
Details

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Heat Wave in India on Monday, 20 May, 2013 at 16:19 (04:19 PM) UTC.

Description
The heat wave will continue in Delhi and others parts of the country for the next two to three days. Dusty winds will hit north and northwest India during the period. In the first heat wave (about 45 degrees Celsius or above) of the summer in the capital, continuous sunshine for long daylight hours, stretching as much as 13 hours and 36 minutes, is driving up the temperature. The temperature in Delhi this week rose to 44.6 degrees Celsius and 46.2 degrees Celsius at the Safdarjang and Palam observatories respectively. It will not be surprising if the maximum temperature rises further to 45 degrees Celsius, a level observed on 31 May last year, the second time in a decade. The May record for Delhi, however, is 47.2 degrees Celsius, seen on 29 May 1944. Delhi wasn’t the hottest place in north India. Hisar in Haryana recorded 46 degrees Celsius on Sunday, five degrees above the average record of 40.7 degrees.

In Hisar, the maximum temperature may break last year’s record of 46.4 degrees registered on 31 May in the next two days. The highest maximum temperatures ever recorded in Hissar is 48.8 degrees on 21 May 1998. Winds from the Thar desert will continue to make life uncomfortable in most parts of northwest, central and east India in the coming two days. Some respite is possible at isolated pockets over northwest India if winds become southwesterly as they contain some moisture and are a bit cooler than the westerly winds. But most of the places in the region especially over Rajasthan, Punjab and Haryana will remain intense heat conditions. Hot and dry westerly winds will continue to hit central and east India in the coming two days so temperatures will remain in the mid-forties or above over interior Maharashtra. Nagpur, which registered 47.3 degrees as maximum could see a further rise in day temperature. The highest ever May temperature in Nagpur is 47.8 degrees registered on 26 May 1954. East Uttar Pradesh and adjoining areas of Bihar have temperatures in lower forties.

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Delhi reels under 44.5 degrees Celsius heat, no respite in sight

 

 

NEW DELHI: The mercury’s dreaded surge into the high forties has left vast swathes of north India sweltering under a severe heat wave spread across Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh and Bihar. Churu in Rajasthan continued to sizzle for the third day, recording a blistering 48.2 degrees Celsius.

Delhi sweated under 44.5 degrees Celsius, five degrees above normal, while Palam was the hottest in NCR at 46.2 degrees.

Met officials said there would be no respite till May 24. Even that would lower temperatures by just 1-2 degrees, after which high temperatures would return for the rest of the month, the Met office said. This would mark only the second instance of Delhi seeing such a prolonged heat wave in May in the last 10 years.

Mercury to stay high till Saturday

“The heat wave is the result of the absence of any western disturbance in Delhi and neighbouring areas, strengthening of hot northwesterly winds from the desert and subsidence of air in association with an anticyclone over Rajasthan and adjoining areas,” said O P Singh, deputy director of meteorology, Delhi Regional Meteorological Centre

“Such conditions are favourable for dust raising winds in northwest India and are likely to continue during the fourth week of May as well. There will be a small decrease in temperature during the coming weekend with the advent of a western disturbance,” Singh added.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Read Full Article Here

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No respite from heat for Delhi: Meteorological department

 

Watch  Video Here

 

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Natural disasters uprooted more than 32 million people in 2012

32,4 million people were forced to flee their homes last year due to natural disasters such as floods, storms and earthquakes, according to a report released by Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre on May 13, 2013. According to the report, 98% of those uprooted were displaced by climate- and weather-related events. Climate change is believed to play an increasingly significant role in global disasters. 2012 Special Report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change stated that, “disasters associated with climate extremes influence population mobility and relocation, affecting host and origin communities.”

This map shows internal displacement worldwide in 2012 by state and number of displaced people. CLICK ON IMAGE FOR LARGER VIEW (Credit: NRC/IDMC)

Floods in India and Nigeria were responsible for 41 % of displacement worldwide last year. Monsoon floods in India uprooted about 6.9 million people, while in Nigeria some 6.1 million were newly displaced. While Asia and Africa were hardest affected, some 1.3 million people were displaced in wealthy nations, especially the United States. Last year, the U.S. was among the 10 countries that experienced the most new displacement. Following Hurricane Sandy, most of those displaced were able to find refuge in adequate temporary shelter while displaced from their own homes.

The largest regional increase in the number of internally displaced people in 2012 was in the Middle East and North Africa, where 2.5 million people were forced to flee their homes. There were almost 6 million affected in the region at the end of 2012, a rise of 40 % on the 2011. Asia showed the second highest increase in new displacement after the Middle East and North Africa, with 1.4 million people forced to flee their homes during 2012.

 Read Full Article Here

WATCHING THE WORLD EVOLVE AND TRANSFORM

Tropical Cyclone Mahasen fully dissipated after weakening into tropical storm on May 16, 2013. Luckily, its impact was far less damaging than initially expected. Mahasen veered west of its predicted path after dumping heavy rains over bay of Bengal coastal areas.

Mahasen hit land with maximum wind speeds of about 100 km/h (62 mph) and quickly weakened. There was no major tidal surge due the low tide in time of Mahasen’s landfall. However, many low-lying areas and islands were inundated by a surge during the storm. More than 49,000 thatched houses were destroyed.

The cyclone spared major populated areas in Bangladesh, including Chittagong and the seaside resort of Cox’s Bazar. By the time Mahasen hit Chittagong and Cox’s Bazar, wind speeds had plunged to 25 km/h (16 mph).

The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Aqua satellite captured this natural-color image the day that Mahasen came ashore. Clouds stretched across Bangladesh, northeastern India, and northwestern Burma.

The TRMM satellite had two very informative views as deadly tropical Cyclone Mahasen was moving toward and then over Bangladesh. TRMM passed above Mahasen on May 15, 2013 at 2133 UTC and saw Mahasen again on May 16, 2013 at 0406 UTC after the tropical cyclone’s center passed over Bengladesh’s Ganges Delta.

Read Full Report  Here

WATCHING THE WORLD EVOLVE AND TRANSFORM

Alvin had strengthened to a Tropical Storm on May 15, 2013 and now has weakened and is considered a Post-Tropical Cyclone. With the excessive wind shear and cooler water, the storm has dissipated into just a weak low pressure.

According to Tropical Weather Outlook by US National Hurricane Center, an area of low pressure associated with the remnants of Alvin is located about 800 miles southwest of Manzanillo, Mexico. The system continues to produce a large area of disorganized shower and thunderstorm activity.

See Full Report  Here

Tornado.jpgDamage near Gransbury, Texas, after a severe storm and possible tornado hit earlier tonight. (Twitter/@StormCoker)

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Officials: ‘Multiple fatalities’ in Texas tornado

By JOHN L. MONE and TERRY WALLACE
Associated Press /  May 15, 2013

GRANBURY, Texas (AP) — A tornado ripped through a picturesque lakeside North Texas town on Wednesday, resulting in multiple fatalities and destroying or damaging homes, authorities said.

The tornado ripped through the Brazos River courthouse town of Granbury about 8 p.m. as part of a outbreak of severe weather that plagued the region Wednesday afternoon and evening.

Hardest hit were two neighborhoods, Rancho Brazos Estates and DeCordova Ranch, in the southern end of the town of about 8,000 residents about 65 miles southwest of Dallas, said Hood County sheriff’s Lt. Kathy Jiveden.

There were multiple fatalities, she said, but she had no estimate of dead or injured or the number of homes destroyed.

Officers ‘‘are going house to house’’ looking for residents trapped, injured or dead in the rubble of demolished homes near Lake Granbury, Jiveden said.

Rancho Brazos Estates resident Allacia Jenny said she witnessed devastation in her neighborhood.

‘‘The house across from mine looked like it was destroyed,’’ said Jenny, 22.

Toppled large trees litter her yard, and ‘‘I saw power lines all over the place,’’ she said.

Read Full Article Here

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Official says multiple fatalities in Texas tornado

Tornado 2.jpgAn image of the tornado 8 miles west of Weatherford, Texas, taken by Grant Johnston of NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth. (Twitter/@GrantJNBC5)

By Mark Heim | mheim@al.com

Several people were killed and 10 were injured Wednesday night when a possible tornado hit Granbury, Texas, city officials told CNN.

Kathy Jividen, a spokeswoman for the Hood County, Texas, sheriff’s office said there were “multiple fatalities” in the wake of the storm.

Hood County Commissioner Steve Berry told The Weather Channel a little after 10 p.m. that there are two confirmed deaths, at least 16 injured and multiple structures collapsed.

Read Full Article and Watch Videos Here

cbc.ca (© Copyright: (C) Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, http://www.cbc.ca/aboutcbc/discover/termsofuse.html#Rss)
Updated: Sat, 11 May 2013 22:42:04 GMT | By CBC News, cbc.ca

Wall of ice destroys Manitoba homes, cottages



Wall of ice destroys Manitoba homes, cottages

 

Area officials told CBC News the wind pushed built-up ice off Dauphin Lake on Friday evening and caused it to pile up in the community, located on the lake’s southern shore.

The piles of ice, which were more than nine metres tall in some cases, destroyed at least six homes and cottages, according to the Rural Municipality of Ochre River.

Another 14 homes suffered extensive damage, with some structures knocked off their foundations.

Clayton Watts, Ochre River’s deputy reeve, said it’s a miracle no one was hurt.

He told CBC News one minute people were watching hockey in their living rooms, the next they heard something that sounded like a freight train near their homes.

“It happened so quick,” said Watts. “And you can’t predict it — not like water that slowly comes up.”

Watts said there are several cabins that were completely flattened by the wall of ice that came at them.

“The ice is over top of them, they’ve been crushed, there’s nothing left,” he said.

“There are other cabins that have been knocked right off their footings,” he continued. “There’s ice right over top of some of the cabins, coming over the roof on the other side.”

 

Read Full Article Here

 

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cbc.ca (© Copyright: (C) Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, http://www.cbc.ca/aboutcbc/discover/termsofuse.html#Rss)
Updated: Sun, 12 May 2013 20:48:20 GMT | By CBC News, cbc.ca

Ice wall damage leaves Manitoba community devastated



Ice wall damage leaves Manitoba community devastated

A massive cleanup effort is underway in Ochre Beach after a wave of lake ice swept up by strong winds destroyed or seriously damaged 27 homes in the community on Friday night.

Winds gusting at 80 km/h pushed ice off Dauphin Lake and caused it to pile up along the lake’s southern shore where the community is located.

A local state of emergency was declared in the Rural Municipality of Ochre Beach after the piles of ice, which in some cases were more than nine metres high, destroyed 13 homes and cottages and severely damaged 14 others.

Several homes were completely crushed, others knocked right off their foundations.

Many devastated homeowners are still in disbelief about what happened.

Myles Haverluck was outside barbecuing when he noticed something was wrong. He said he could hear a big roar as he saw the wave of ice coming.

“By the time we went around the front the cabin, next door was moving 10 feet off its foundation,” he told CBC News.

“Then we heard these cracks, and we went inside the house and the ice had come through the windows of the kitchen and living room” Haverluck continued.

Andrew Barnet was also working outside when the wind storm came towards the lakeshore homes.

“Looked out and the ice started coming out over the house and the ice started shifting,” Barnet told CBC News.

 

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