SOTT monthly Earth Changes Summary video suggestions

Footage from MrMBB333's January 15th video compilation,; I'm guessing the date was January 13th:

Strange red 'plasma conduit' seen over Norway'

Footage starts at 4:17.

 
Last edited:
Footage from MrMBB333's January 15th video compilation,; I'm guessing the date was January 13th:

Strange red 'plasma conduit' seen over Norway'

Footage starts at 4:17.


Here's the Red sky we saw here on ‎Friday, ‎January ‎18, ‎2019, ‏‎8:20:07 AM.
 

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21 January, impact on the moon during the lunar eclipse
These images correspond to a lunar impact flash spotted by the telescopes operating in the framework of the MIDAS survey on Jan. 21, at 4:41:38 universal time (23:41:38 US eastern time). The impact took place during the totality phase of the lunar eclipse. The flash was produced by a rock (a meteoroid) that hit the lunar ground. The MIDAS Survey is being conducted by the University of Huelva and the Institute of Astrophysics of Andalusia.


https://youtu.be/FNvfBCu-jjI
 
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The breathtaking moment an avalanche broke loose and dragged a snowboarder 100 metres down a hill in Sankt Gertraud, Kärnten, Austria, on Sunday [January 20]

 
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25 January, dam collapses at Brumadinho, Brazil.


https://youtu.be/JAYM9gGin3E

https://youtu.be/nCOH6Dn8VYs

https://youtu.be/P67hs-Fahi0

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/jan/25/brazil-dam-collapse-news-latest-mining-disaster-brumadinho said:
Brazil dam collapse: seven bodies found and hundreds still missing
Burst of tailings dam at iron ore mine releases wave of red sludge, with chance of finding survivors ‘minimal’

Seven bodies have been found and more than a hundred people remain missing after a dam operated by the mining giant Vale collapsed in the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais, releasing a wave of red iron ore waste and raising fears of widespread contamination.

Fire chief Col Edgar Estevão said there were seven dead, nine wounded and 100 people had been rescued from the sea of mud released by the dam, according to the G1 news site. The fire brigade believe around 150 are missing, he said.

The state governor, Romeu Zema, told reporters on Friday he did not expect many survivors. “We know now that the chances of having survivors are minimal and that we will probably rescue bodies,” he said.

Brazilian television showed images of survivors being winched to safety by a helicopter after the disaster at the Feijão mine near Brumadinho, less than two hours from the state capital, Belo Horizonte.

As videos and photos of the destruction wrought by the torrent of mud swept around social media, enraged Brazilians demanded punishment for anyone responsible.

The incident comes less than four years after another tailings dam collapsed in Minas Gerais, killing 19 people in what was Brazil’s worst environmental disaster. That dam was operated by Samarco, which at the time of the disaster was half-owned by Vale, as well as Anglo-Australian mining giant BHP Billiton.

Vale’s chief executive, Fabio Schvartsman, told reporters on Friday that one dam containing iron ore waste, known as tailings, had failed and another overflowed. Brazil’s environment ministry had earlier said three dams were involved in the disaster. Schvartsman said around 300 staff we were working at the plant and 100 had been rescued.

“Most of those affected were Vale employees,” he said. “I’m completely torn apart by what happened.”

Among those missing were 100 mine workers who were having lunch in an administrative area when it was hit by a torrent of sludge and water, said a fire brigade spokesman, Lt Pedro Aihara.

“Our main worry now is to quickly find out where the missing people are,” Aihara said on GloboNews cable television channel. He later told TV Record that an upscale guesthouse called Pousada Nova Estância had been completely swept away along with 38 staff and guests.

Set in rolling countryside, the town of Brumadinho has dozens of guesthouses for tourists visiting the nearby Inhotim outdoor art complex but is also home to mine workers. Local media said Inhotim, which attracts visitors from all over the world, had been evacuated but was not affected.

“The mud still has not reached the town. The mud formed a barrier stopping the river and the town is in alert about what could happen,” Bernadete Parreiras, 69, owner of the Pousada Lafevi guesthouse near Brumadinho’s centre, told the Guardian. “Everyone is in panic, people disappeared, many friends, many family, many people from the town have disappeared … I don’t have words to express the feeling in the town and what people are suffering.”

The company said in a statement it had made 40 ambulances and a helicopter available for rescue work. It said the 86-metre-high (280ft) dam, built in 1976, held 11.7m litres of mining waste and had condition-of-stability declarations from an international company called TÜV SÜD. It was no longer in operation, was regularly inspected and was being decommissioned, the company said.

But Vale was trying to increase capacity in the mine complex where the dam was located and at another nearby mine, according to the Intercept Brasil, which printed a report by the National Civil Society Forum for Hydrographic Basins, a network of civil society groups, that had urged the authorities not to grant the licence over inconsistencies in the licensing procedure.

Brazil’s ministry of the environment said it had set up a crisis cabinet and that environment minister, Ricardo Salles, and Eduardo Bim, head of the ministry’s environment agency Ibama, were heading to the scene.

“Our major concern at this moment is to attend any victims of this serious tragedy,” Brazil’s new president, Jair Bolsonaro, tweeted. “All reasonable measures are being taken.”

Bolsonaro told reporters in Brasília that he would fly to Minas Gerais on Saturday morning and fly over the region “so we can once again re-evaluate the damage and take all the reasonable measures to minimise the suffering of relatives and possible victims as well as the environmental issue”.

Bolsonaro has attacked environment agencies including Ibama for holding up development with what he describes as excessive licensing requirements and advocated freeing up mining in protected indigenous reserves.

Environmentalists said Brazil had failed to learn from the Mariana disaster, in which 375 families lost their homes, and are yet to be rehoused. The three companies that operated the Mariana dam – Samarco, Vale and BHP Billiton – spent more than $1bn on a huge clean-up and relief operation and paid millions of dollars in fines over the disaster. But no individual has been convicted.

“This new disaster with a mining waste tailings dam – this time in Brumadinho – is the sad consequence of a lesson not learnt by the Brazilian state and mining companies,” said Greenpeace Brasil’s campaigns director, Nilo D’Avila, in a statement. “Cases like these are not accidents but environmental crimes that should be investigated, punished and repaired.”
 
Translated from Spanish by Microsoft
More info in the video description on Youtube
@lainfo_ciencia @eldigitalCLM @tribunadetoledo @ABC_Toledo @CMM_es @LiberalCastilla @DiariodeCLM @24clm @Enclmdiario @EFEciencia
"It happened at 0:22 this morning (January 27th). The image shows the trajectory that followed the ball of fire"
Dr. Jose Maria Madiedo

Chinese research icebreaker collides with an iceberg during Antarctic expedition
Published on Jan 24, 2019 HD
A video clip by China Central Television (CCTV) shows that after the collision, the deck of the icebreaker is piled up with snow and ice of about 400 cubic meters and weighing 250 tons. The mast on the bow was broken.


That’s actually off the south west corner of #JerseyCI, not Guernsey.
 
27 January
https://sputniknews.com/latam/201901271071866574-victims-peru-collapse-hotel/ said:
At Least 15 Dead After Hotel Wall Collapses in Peru - Authorities
MOSCOW (Sputnik) - A collapse of a hotel wall in Peru's southern Apurimac region left 15 people killed and 29 others injured during a wedding celebration on Sunday, the country's National Civil Defense Institute (INDECI) said.

"Heavy rains have led to the collapse of a wall at a wedding ceremony in the Alhambra hotel [in the city of Abancay," the INDECI said on Twitter, adding that "the number of people killed has risen to 15, while the number of injured people has been updated to 29."

https://youtu.be/A7qpMW14gHo
 
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