Watch the skies and land and oceans

"However, watch Africa"
(Joe) Were the Turkey earthquakes natural, in the sense of not being induced by human technology?

A: Yes. Human tech can produce smaller quakes but this one was natural and part of a sequence. The powers handling this technology are well aware of the dangers of trying to generate quakes.

Q: (L) And what are the dangers?

(Pierre) Further quakes.

A: Yes

Q: (Andromeda) Chain reaction...

A: Yes

Q: (L) Well then how come these people aren't aware that putting dust in the atmosphere to shield us from the sun is not a really good idea?

A: They know that also but propose such nonsense as a fear-mongering tactic.

Q: (Joe) Just to promote global warming and climate change. So, they said the Turkey one was part of a sequence?

A: Yes. This year there will be more.

Q: (Joe) When you say "sequence", you don't necessarily mean in the same geographic region then?

A: No.

Q: (Joe) On the...

A: However, watch Africa.

Q:
(Joe) Africa doesn't usually have quakes.

(Niall) The Great Rift? Somalia and the Horn of Africa...

A: Recall the strange events off the coast several years ago.

Q: (Joe) The outgassings?

A: Yes

Q: (Joe) So it could be Africa as in off the coast of Africa.

(L) Was there some strange noise off the coast…?

(Tuatha de Danaan) Madagascar.

(L) Yeah.

A drying climate is making East Africa pull apart faster

A switch from a humid to a dry climate has led the Eastern African Rift Zone to pull apart more freely, new research finds.

Over the past 5,000 years, East Africa has dried out. Now, new research finds that this change may be making the continent pull apart faster.

Faults in the East African Rift Zone have sped up since the levels of large lakes have dropped, according to research published in November in the journal Scientific Reports.

The findings highlight the two-way relationship between the climate and plate tectonics, said study senior author Christopher Scholz, a geologist, physicist and professor emeritus at Columbia University.

"Usually it is something we think about the other way around: Mountains build, and that changes the local or regional climate," Scholz told Live Science. "But it can work the other way around too."

Scholz and his colleagues conducted their research at Lake Turkana in Kenya, which is 155 miles (250 kilometers) long, 19 miles (30 km) wide, and up to 400 feet (120 meters) deep in places. That's nothing, however, compared with the level more than 5,000 years ago, when the lake was up to 500 feet (150 m) deeper.

That was during the African Humid Period, when much of Africa was wetter than it is today. In East Africa, this period persisted from about 9,600 years ago to 5,300 years ago, with drier conditions prevailing over the past 5,300 years. The researchers studied lake-bed sediments to determine ancient water levels and sediment flows into Lake Turkana. In the process, they noticed many small faults and the fingerprints of long-ago earthquakes in the sediments.

The tectonic plate that underlies Africa is pulling apart in eastern Africa and may one day split into two plates with an ocean between them. The deep, narrow lakes in the region — including Lake Turkana and nearby waterways, such as Lake Malawi in Tanzania and Mozambique —, are the result of this rifting process, which is creating a deep valley in the region.

Scholz and his team wanted to know if the changes in the lakes themselves were influencing this rifting process. Water matters to tectonics: When glaciers retreat, for example, the lifting of their weight actually causes the land beneath to spring up like rising bread — a process called isostatic rebound. Large amounts of water similarly press down on the crust beneath, potentially affecting processes like earthquakes.

The researchers found that after the end of the African Humid Period, the faults in Lake Turkana began to move faster, at an average rate of 0.007 inches (0.17 millimeters) of extra movement per year. In general, Africa is rifting apart at 0.25 inches (6.35 millimeters) per year.

Using computer simulations, the researchers figured out that this seismic speedup likely has two causes. One is that with less water pressing down on the crust, the faults have more freedom to move: Imagine a vise loosening around two slabs of wood. The other cause is more indirect. On an island in the south side of Lake Turkana is a volcano with an active magma chamber. The removal of water from the African Humid Period decompresses the mantle under this volcano, leading to more melting. That melt, in turn, moves into the volcano's magma chamber, inflating it and leading to more tectonic activity on nearby fault lines.

"We see enhanced faulting during this time interval, so more pronounced earthquakes are presumably prevalent in this broader region now compared to 8,000 years ago," Scholz said.

The researchers are now working on a project at Lake Malawi looking at water level changes going back 1.4 million years, hoping to get a better sense of how the climate affects the separation of continents.

"This information about these huge changes in water volumes in these lakes is a really important part of the story," Scholz said.
 
I use red/IR bulb in the pump house to keep the hardware from freezing. So everything in the pump house will freeze soon if I can't find the problem.
I have a well house, I bought a bunch of thick moving blankets, some front Uhaul and some from Lowes, and I use those to wrap the well head, pressure pump, and pressure tank in there in case power goes out in the well house, and put some over the exposed pipes outside the well house that go in and out of the holding tank, for those I put a jumbo garbage bag over the blankets to keep the rain/ice/snow out. Otherwise I use an electric oil filled radiant style heater for the well house, it's reasonably efficient. Maybe you could get some blankets for backup.
 
Near the town of Niscemi in Sicily there was a big landslide yesterday. It is a different part of Sicily to the other reports about storm damage. The video itself speaks to the scale of the damage:

Here is a geological analysis of what happened there What happened with the Niscemi landslide in Sicily and what is a sliding landslide: geological analysis
The situation in Niscemi is tragic; there are many displaced people, many of whom have lost their homes.
When I visited that area many years ago, I remember that many villages have the same topographical structure as Niscemi.
To avoid flooding in the low-lying areas, the former inhabitants lived on hills or higher ground.

Landslide in Niscemi, 1,500 displaced: “We are afraid, what will happen to our homes?”
January 26, 2026, 8:12 p.m.

niscemi-frana.jpeg


Evacuation ordered for all residents within a 4-kilometer radius VIDEO
NISCEMI - The number of residents who have left their homes, businesses, and professional offices in Niscemi (Caltanissetta) has risen to 1,500 because they are in the red zone due to a landslide that is making the areas near the historic center increasingly dangerous.


The civil protection agency has ordered the evacuation of all residents within a 4 km radius. The measure affects entire neighborhoods, such as Sante Croci, Trappeto, and the Via Popolo area. About 300 families have been relocated to other homes and a sports hall. Schools are closed, and the main roads, provincial roads 10 and 12, are impassable.

“I bought my house a year ago with a mortgage,” says truck driver Francesco Blanco, “and now I don't know what will become of it. The house is in the area affected by the landslide. For now, we are staying with relatives, but I don't know what the situation will be in the coming days.” Several citizens who cannot stay in their homes have been accommodated in the “Pio La Torre” sports hall.

Niscemi, in the province of Caltanissetta, has about 30,000 inhabitants and is 22 kilometers from Gela, 35 from Caltanissetta, and 100 kilometers from Catania. Today it is an “almost isolated city,” says Mayor Massimiliano Conti. The advancing landslide, “extending for four kilometers,” has made it impassable.
 
However, this Parelius near Turin happened on January 20, 2026.

A parhelion appears in the skies above Turin: the rare “sun dog” photographed in Sestriere

Nei cieli del Torinese spunta un parelio: il raro “cane solare” fotografato a Sestriere


A natural optical phenomenon linked to ice crystals in high clouds.
A parhelion appears in the skies above Turin: the rare “sun dog” photographed in Sestriere Photo by Simone Grasso - Facebook: Centro Meteo Piemonte

An unusual spectacle caught the attention of onlookers on the afternoon of Tuesday, January 20, 2026, in the mountains of Sestriere, in the upper Susa Valley. Two symmetrical, colorful bright spots appeared around the sun, visible to the naked eye: this is a parhelion, a phenomenon also known as a sun dog.

The photo was taken by Simone Grasso and published on the Facebook page of Centro Meteo Piemonte. It documents a rare natural event, but one that is well known in meteorology.

A parhelion is an optical-atmospheric phenomenon that occurs under specific conditions of altitude and temperature. It is caused by the refraction of sunlight through tiny ice crystals suspended in the atmosphere, typically found in medium-high clouds, often of the cirrus type. These thin, almost imperceptible clouds become visible thanks to their interaction with sunlight.

 
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