SOTT Earth Changes Summary - February 2024: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs
Lahaina, Hawaii; Valparaiso, Chile; and the Texas Panhandle were been hit by wildfires with suspicious origins, unusual patterns of spread, and extremely destructive effects. Theories and speculation took over social networks: from arson to Directed Energy Weapons. But to what end? Land grab, to instill fear in the population? Only time will tell.
"I have witnessed and observed some extraordinary damage in our state. Could be caused by hurricanes or tornadoes, and frequently when you see the aftermath of that damage, there's some symbol as of a structure that is still there.
When you look at the damages that have occurred here, it's just gone. Completely gone. Nothing left but ashes on the ground.
Some early, and I will categorize as premature assessments, show that there are about 400 to 500 structures that have been destroyed. There's no way to say for certainty that's gonna be the final number because there's still the ongoing assessment process." - Texas Governor, Greg Abbott.
We have seen signs of systematic sabotage by the globalist elites against farmland, farmers, and food production infrastructure in recent years, could this be part of it?
Meanwhile, unusually cold temperatures and snowfall for February hit a significant portion of the Northern Hemisphere:
- Xinjiang, China: Harshest cold spell in over six decades - -63.4 degrees Fahrenheit.
- Mongolia: 90% of the country is affected by harsh winter conditions.
- Himachal Pradesh, India: 2 feet of snow in 24 hours - Almost 600 roads blocked.
- Jammu and Kashmir, India: 3 feet of snow in 48 hours.
- Gangwon, South Korea: Record snow cover - 2 feet.
- The Alps - 6 feet of snow in 24 hours.
- Utah, US: 30 inches of new snow in 3 days.
- Arizona, US: 2 feet of snow in 24 hours.
- Global Warming(TM) is nowhere to be found yet...
All this and more in our SOTT Earth Changes Summary for February 2024
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SOTT Earth Changes Summary - January 2024: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs
2024 started with a bang: A magnitude 7.5 earthquake struck western Japan, destroying and collapsing buildings, causing fires, and knocking out infrastructure on Japan's main island of Honshu just as families were celebrating New Year's Day. More than 33,400 people were in evacuation centers and at least 200 buildings collapsed. Some 30,000 households were without power and more than 110,000 were without running water. The death toll rose to over 200, with more than 100 still unaccounted for. Strong aftershocks buried more homes and blocked roads vital for aid deliveries.
Record freezing conditions caused widespread disruption around the world in January. In the US, all 50 states were hit by heavy snowfall at the same time this season; 55% of the continental US was covered in snow - an unprecedented event. This caused widespread travel disruption, thousands of canceled flights, power outages, and damaged infrastructure nationwide.
The so-called Arctic blasts are reaching further south and lingering longer... This "global boiling" is getting pretty cold.
The US is not alone, however, with many parts of the world also experiencing record snowfall:
- Southeast Turkey: Record 23 feet of snow - 1,414 isolated villages.
- Anchorage, Alaska: 8.5 feet of snow at the earliest date on record.
- Finland and Sweden: Coldest temperatures for 25 years.
- South Korea: Heaviest one-day snowfall in 25 years.
- Central China: Record snowstorms and freezing rain - worst winter weather since 2008.
- Moscow: Russia: Record snowfall for 11 January.
Texas, Louisiana, and San Diego, California, experienced a mix of extreme weather this month, with a month's worth of rain in just 3 days, strong wind gusts, and unseasonably cold temperatures.
Meanwhile, in the southern hemisphere, parts of Australia and Brazil received a month's worth of rain in a matter of hours triggering evacuations in some areas.
January also saw a remarkable number of meteor fireballs, with the highlight being a small asteroid that hit the atmosphere over the west of Berlin, Germany:
"The asteroid was only about 1 meter (3 feet) in diameter. It posed no danger to people on the ground. Yet the asteroid might have spread small meteorites over the landscape."
All this and more in our SOTT Earth Changes Summary for January 2024.
SOTT Earth Changes Summary - December 2023: Extreme Weather, Planetary Upheaval, Meteor Fireballs
As Solar Cycle 25 is about to reach an unexpected peak, we observe an increase in electrical phenomena such as air-spirals, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions.
A massive solar storm that nearly reached "X-class" status hit Earth on the first day of the month, causing some minor radio and internet disruptions worldwide. This was followed by one of the largest solar flares since 2017 on December 15, which temporarily knocked out radio communications on Earth, affecting even the higher frequencies.
"These impacts were felt from one end of the Nation to the other," said the NOAA.
The strong and persistent magnetic storms have also affected the ozone hole in the southern hemisphere, which remains unusually large for this time of year when it normally shrinks. It has remained at a size of about 15 km2 to become the third largest after November 30.
At the same time, record cold weather in the stratosphere produced polar clouds earlier and farther south than usual, with people from all over the Northern Hemisphere reporting or recording sightings. These are extraordinary excursions from the normal polar cloud habitat.
The season for polar clouds usually starts in January. The current cold wave has given the season an early start and could herald many more PSCs in the weeks ahead.
Furthermore, on December 25, BAM Weather reported that "A textbook sudden stratospheric warming event looks to be unfolding,"
Sudden stratospheric warmings involve a rapid and dramatic rise in temperature — as much as 80 degrees Fahrenheit — within the polar stratosphere, together with a disruption in the stratospheric polar vortex. That disruption typically either splits the vortex or pushes it southward, along with associated Arctic air masses". And it's the splitting of the polar vortex that delivers the blast of Arctic air to the Lower 48 region.
[...]"It appears as if there could be a legitimate risk developing for a mid to late Jan major blast of Arctic air and stormy weather," BAMWX noted.
So get your big jacket ready.
In this regard, the Russian Academy of Sciences interviewed Andrey Fedotov, a top polar scientist whose studies predict a serious global cooling beginning in 2030-2035. According to Fedotov, "the warming is about to end" and "the Earth is about to enter an 'ice age.'
RAS: "So the Ice Age has already arrived, but we haven't felt it yet?"Fedotov: "No. When it comes, you will feel it immediately."
[...] RAS: "And what should be done now? Prepare felt boots, warm clothes, heaters?"Fedotov: "I would start with food. Hungry-in felt boots won't last long.
Here are the top freezing events for December 2023:
Southern Germany - Munich hit with record-highest snowfall for December.
Siberia - Sudden decrease up to minus 69 Fahrenheit.
Moscow - blizzards blanketed Moscow in record snowfall.
Kara-Kulja, Kyrgyzstan - 51 inches of snow.
South Korea - record-breaking cold and snowfall.
Northern Japan - record-high snow - 28 inches in 24 hours.
Northeast US - Unusual cold temperatures and snowfall causing widespread power outages.
East and Sothern China - deep freeze triggers extreme snowfall.
And unusually severe storms continued to wreak havoc around the world:
Hanang District, Tanzania - 65 fatalities after heavy overnight rain.
Washington and Oregon - Atmospheric river dumps record rain - 8.6 inches in 24 hours.
Queensland, Australia - 7 feet of rainfall dumped from Cyclone Jasper.
Bahia Blanca, Argentina - 13 dead after heavy rainfall, and hurricane-like winds.
Tamil Nadu, India - 3 feet of rainfall in 24 hours.
East Coast states of Malaysia - Heavy floods displaced 25,000 people.
Southern Thailand - Severe flooding displaced 10,000.
We have to mention that the deadliest earthquake in more than a decade killed at least 127 people and injured about 700 in northwestern China. The quake triggered landslides and destroyed roads and infrastructure, knocking out communications, power, and water lines in the region.
Also, seismic activity on Iceland's Reykjanes peninsula erupted spectacularly after weeks of unrest. A fissure 2.5 miles long appeared on the surface and spewed a wall of lava up to 100 feet high. Authorities evacuated the nearly 4,000 residents of the fishing town of Grindavík but said the eruption posed no threat to life or travel. This type of eruption does not usually produce much ash, but experts said there could be some impact on air travel.
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