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Tuesday, 24 March 2015

Sinkhole devours part of street in Cleveland, Ohio

Sinkhole

© WOIO

Part of Eddy Road collapsing into a sinkhole



While drivers across the city look out for potholes, residents who live along Eddy Road, south of the Shoreway worry about a much bigger problem. Part of their street was swallowed up by a big sinkhole.

"It's scary, it's scary. That's literally at the corner of my street," said Unique Patterson, a resident who has to drive past it on her way home.


Several neighbors say they noticed part of the asphalt collapsing yesterday. Within a matter of minutes there was a car crater in the middle of the street.




While many potholes have the potential to do some costly damage to vehicles, this hole can swallow up an entire car and everyone in it. That's why the people who live on this street are worried.

"We might be running down the street and another part of the street be messed up," said Antonio Adams.


Like Adams, many here are wondering if there are other sinkholes nearby and whether they should be driving so close to this one.


19 Action News reporter Bill Safos made sure the soil in and around it was stable before stepping into it to find several feet of hallow ground extending under the roadway that cars were still driving on.


"We might get injured," said Adams.


According to the Mayor's Media Relations Director, the City of Cleveland was told about the sinkhole Friday night.


It couldn't be fixed then but city workers put up yellow tape and orange barrels to keep cars away. Until it's fixed, neighbors say they're watching drivers dodge a disaster.


SOTT FOCUS: Crimea: The Way Home - EN Subtitles - Full Documentary (VIDEO)

crimea way back home

This is Andrey Kondrashov's documentary on the return of Crimea to Russia, aired in Russia on March 15, and now available with English subtitles. It has been a year since Crimeans took to the polls to vote for returning to their Motherland and leaving wretched Ukraine behind. The Western powers - led, as ever, by the US and UK - are determined to portray this momentous historic event as an imperial land-grab by Russia, and that it caused the subsequent civil war between Kiev and the breakaway provinces in the country's East.

However, as this excellent documentary shows, the Russian government could see that the violent manner in which the elected Ukrainian leader Yanukovich had been ousted from power - with American fingerprints all over it - meant chaos would soon spread throughout Ukraine, and that the majority ethnic Russian population in Crimea would be among the worst hit by neo-Nazi militias terrorizing anyone whom they considered 'insufficiently loyal' to the US-selected regime. When President Yanukovich fled the capital on February 22nd 2013, President Putin set in motion a series of responses that would present the first real (and successful) challenge to American imperial hegemony.


‌ [embedded content]


A Rossiya One production, EN subtitles by Vox Populi Evo (VPE). Uploaded to LiveLeak by VPE, in 14 parts, on 22 March 2015


In this must-watch documentary, you'll learn:



  • how Russia saved President Yanukovich of Ukraine

  • how Crimeans returning from revolution in Kiev tasted the the rage of the Right Sektor 'Maidan orcs'

  • how members of the Berkut police force escaped to Crimea and helped set up people's militias to defend the peninsula, not least by preventing Kiev military jets from landing at Sevastopol's airport

  • how these civilian militias defended against an organized takeover of the Crimean Parliament in Sevastopol

  • that most Crimean Tatars sided with the ethnic Russian population, despite efforts by the coup organizers to generate an ethnic split between them

  • how the militias came together to blockade repeated efforts by the 'Maidan orcs' (Right Sektor fascists) to enter the peninsula - by road, train and air

  • how the Crimean Referendum was enacted following near unanimous support from the people's representatives in the Crimean Parliament

  • how Berkut forces were joined by Kuban Cossacks from across the Black Sea region, including veterans of Russia's Afghan War, to defend Crimea from efforts by the new regime to send in weapons and explosives

  • how, having prevented Kiev from deploying 'Maidan orcs' via air, rail and road, Russia's Black Sea Fleet blockaded the Ukrainian navy from leaving its home port

  • how the Russian military placed the brand new Coastal Defence System 'Bastion-P' at locations along Crimea's southern coast. Once activated, the approaching USS Destroyer turned around at full-speed before Russian military jets chased the American warship south

  • how the 'Night Wolves' biker gang joined in the defence of Crimea in Yalta by kidnapping Ukrainian General Mikhail Koval and uncovering weapons caches left by the Ukies prior to the coup

  • how the Crimean citizen militias and Russian soldiers stationed in Sevastopol peacefully neutralized 20,000 Ukrainian forces stationed on the peninsula, many of whom then defected to Russia


See the following news coverage for more on the documentary and conditions in Crimea one year later:

Heavy rainfall floods Bangkok, Thailand


© Nattapol Lovakij

The flood in Asok Montri road after the heavy downpour in Bangkok.



A heavy downpour for more than one hour around noon Tuesday in inner Bangkok has caused floods on several roads and traffic jams.

Traffic police reported at least seven locations in Bangkok were flooded.


In some areas, the water is as high as the footpath level.


The flooded areas are Asok Montri Road, some sections of Phetchaburi and Ratchadaphisek roads, Soi Suan Phlu, Sukhumvit Sois 1, 2 and 24, Phloenchit Road, Mitmaitri Road near the Thai-Japanese Stadium in Din Daeng and Silom Road.





An image tweeted by Twitter user @hs3nza via @js100radio at 1.45pm Tuesday shows a deep flood in Ratchaphisek Soi 3.







Twitter user @nuto96 tweets via @js100radio an image of Asok intersection taken from a high-rise building at around 1.15pm.







A traffic radio @fm91trafficpro tweets an image of the flood on Surawongse Road at 1.45pm


Giant hailstones fall in Queensland, Australia




This shard of hail measuring about 12 centimetres crashed down in Chinchilla on Saturday afternoon



Weather watchers around the world have been stunned by giant chunks of ice that smashed an outback Queensland town in recent days.

Hailstones up to 12cm in diameter smashed cars and windows and left lawns checkered in the western downs town of Chinchilla during a freak storm on Saturday afternoon.


The downpour that stunned the state has now attracted interest overseas, with many in the US shocked at the "weird" weather that no one saw coming.


Some have pointed out the hailstones were about the same size as the small marsupials the town shares a name with.


"Shocking footage," wrote Keith Estiler, a New York City resident who shared video of the giant balls of ice bouncing off an oval in Chinchilla.


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"Meanwhile in Australia..." another person said.

While intense weather is a typical part of Australian life, the Chinchilla storm that has foreigners talking also managed to surprise locals.


Marina Baker and her children were sprayed with glass when their car was pelted with projectiles at the local sporting fields.


"We had the back window smashed in (and after) about 30 seconds of moving one came through and landed in the back seat," she told ABC.


"The kids were on the floor screaming. We had my sister and husband in the front and they (were) trying to get the kids away from the glass.


"There were cars everywhere around us (with) windows just breaking everywhere."


Another local, Vicki Muhling, shared a photo of one the stones which caused havoc on her property next to a tape measuring 12cm in length.


The region's mayor, Ray Brown, told ABC nobody was injured in the freak storm, though property damage was widespread.


He said some 1300 homes were left without power with another 3000 customers experiencing supply interruptions.


However, draught-stricken farmers in the area welcomed the "much needed rain".


The Bureau of Meteorology said the intensity of the storm was a result of two troughs which caused heavy instability.


250 villages cut off by heavy snowfall in Turkey




Snow removal in Turkey.



In Hozat and Ovacik snowfall exceeded half a meter (20 inches), says this article on gercekgundem.com. And there is 20 cm (8 inches) of snow in the city center of Pülümür.

Normal life in Tunceli is stopped


Due to the increasing snowfall during the night in Tunceli, the Tunceli-Pülümür and Tunceli-Erzincan highways remained closed to traffic due to the dozens of vehicles stuck on the road.


A large number of machines were sent to the area to open roads. Meanwhile, Tunceli-Hozat, it was learned that the Tunceli-Ovacik road transport in closed due to snow.


About 250 villages are cut off.


Heavy snowfall in Turkey


Due to intensive heavy snowfall in Kayseri the Kayseri-Malatya road was closed for transportation.


Police teams that do not allow the passage of vehicles on the highway.


Snow removal and salting operations continue in order to avoid more disruption in transportation.


Thanks to Argiris Diamantis for these links


DNA analysis reveals the origins of modern Europeans

Ancient migrations to Europe

© Wolfgang Haak

Map depicting the two major hypotheses of the spread of Indo-European languages (white arrows) and geographic distribution of the archaeological cultures described in the text.



Europe is famously tesselated, with different cultural and language groups clustering in different regions. But how did they all get there? And how are they related?

One way of answering these questions comes from digging up relics of the past. Europe has a rich archaeological record, ranging from periods well before the famous metal ages (i.e. copper, bronze and iron) to the recent adventures of the Romans, Vandals, Huns and Vikings.


Distinctive types of pottery and cultural practices associated with burials and settlements have been used to group the ancient populations into individual "archaeological cultures". However, it hasn't been clear whether there is a genetic basis for these group boundaries or whether they're just cultural.


Another line of evidence to illuminate how various groups are related comes from their languages. There is the well known Indo-European language tree - ranging from Hindi to Russian to Spanish. But it's also quite unclear how the languages spread to their present regions.


Now we have another layer of information to help us reveal the history of European peoples: DNA sequencing.


Along with our colleagues, we have been using genome sequencing technology to analyse the vast array of ancient skeletons recovered from across Europe, ranging from the original hunter-gatherer inhabitants to the first farmers who appear around 8,000 years ago, and right up to the early Bronze Age 3,500 years ago.


The genetic results paint a fascinating picture, and were published in a recent series of papers in and .


Third wave


What we have found is that, in addition to the original European hunter-gatherers and a heavy dose of Near Eastern farmers, we can now add a third major population: steppe pastoralists. These nomads appear to have "invaded" central Europe in a previously unknown wave during the early Bronze Age (about 4,500 years ago).


This event saw the introduction of two very significant new technologies to western Europe: domestic horses and the wheel. It also reveals the mysterious source for the Indo-European languages.


Ancient migrations to Europe2

© Credit: Ard Hesselink/Flickr

Perhaps not so far from their ancestors as they seem.



The genetic results have answered a number of contentious and long-standing questions in European history. The first big issue was whether the first farmers in Europe were hunter-gatherers who had learnt farming techniques from neighbours in southeast Europe, or did they instead come from the Near East, where farming was invented.

The genetic results are clear: farming was introduced widely across Europe in one or two rapid waves around 8,000 years ago by populations from the Near East - - effectively the very first skilled migrants .


At first the original hunter-gatherer populations appear to have retreated to the fringes of Europe: to Britain, Scandinavia and Finland. But the genetics show that within a few thousand years they had returned, and significant amounts of hunter-gatherer genomic DNA was mixed in with the farmers 7,000 to 5,000 years ago across many parts of Europe.


Wheeling across Europe


But there was still a major outstanding mystery. Apart from these two groups, the genomic signals clearly showed that a third - - previously unsuspected - large contribution had been made sometime before the Iron Age, around 2,000 years ago. But by whom?


We have finally been able to identify the mystery culprit, using a clever new system invented by our colleagues at Harvard University.


Instead of sequencing the entire genome from a very small number of well preserved skeletons, we analysed 400,000 small genetic markers right across the genome. This made it possible to rapidly survey large numbers of skeletons from all across Europe and Eurasia.


This process revealed the solution to the mystery. Our survey showed that skeletons of the Yamnaya culture from the Russian/Ukrainian grasslands north of the Black Sea, buried in large mounds known as kurgans, turned out to be the genetic source we were missing.


This group of pastoralists, with domestic horses and oxen-drawn wheeled carts, appear to be responsible for up to 75% of the genomic DNA seen in central European cultures 4,500 years ago, known as the Corded Ware Culture. This must have represented a major wave of people, along with all their cultural and technological baggage.


Speaking tongues


This discovery also answered another major archaeological conundrum: who or what was the source of the Indo-European language family, which is wide-spread across Eurasia and the world, and includes English, Spanish, French, Greek, Russian and Hindu?


Archaeologists had two major hypotheses: the language family came with either the invading Near East farming wave more than 8,000 years ago, or some form of steppe population sometime much later. Evidence in support of the first hypothesis was the large scale cultural turnover evident with farming.


The second hypothesis was supported by linguistic evidence of common words across Indo-European languages for things like wheeled vehicles and transport that would match the economy and toolkit of the steppe herders.


Our new genomic data finally provides a smoking gun - or a wheeled cart in this case - as the missing evidence of a major cultural contribution from the steppe in the early Bronze Age. While we can't definitively prove that the Yamnaya were the first to introduce Indo-European language to Europe, the size of the genetic input suggests that it brought at least major parts, if not the whole thing.


So for those of us with European heritage, the next time you see an oxen-drawn cart, or a domestic horse, think "that's my heritage", along with a good chunk of hunter-gatherer and a firm base of early farmer.


An ancient technology is helping India's "water man" save thousands of parched villages

dry land

© Reuters/Amit Dave

Water scarcity has begun early in India.



In 1985, a 28-year-old man from Uttar Pradesh quit his government job, left his family and arrived in the dead of the night at a small village in Rajasthan's Alwar district.

Rajendra Singh, along with four companions from the Tarun Bharat Sangh, a non-profit that traces its origins to the University of Rajasthan, wanted to work in the hinterland. The initial idea was to establish clinics.


"Maybe it was some social chromosomes that fired my imagination to do something useful," Singh said in an interview. "I was a government servant in Jaipur, fed up with just sending statistics to officials."


It look him a few months before finding his life's mission—and it took an ancient innovation, a fast disappearing traditional technology, to help him transform the lives of thousands of villagers in one of India's most arid regions.


On March 20, Singh was awarded the 2015 Stockholm Water Prize, sometimes described as the Nobel prize for water.


Rajendra singh

© Tarun Bharat Sangh

Singh has brought water back to some 1,000 villages.



"Rajendra Singh did not insist with the clinics," the Stockholm International Water Institute, which awards the prize, said in a statement. "Instead, and with the help of the villagers, he set out to build johads, or traditional earthen dams."

"Two decades after Rajendra Singh arrived in Rajasthan, 8,600 johads and other structures to collect water had been built," it observed. "Water had been brought back to a 1,000 villages across the state."


Discovering the johad


But India's "water man" knew little about johads—or water conservation, for that matter—when he arrived in Alwar. With degrees in ayurvedic medicine and Hindi, the son of a wealthy landowner from Uttar Pradesh's Bagpat district had spent time as a student activist, before working for an adult education project.


After spending weeks roaming this corner of the Aravalli hills, Singh met Mangu Meena and Nathi Bhalai (pdf), who introduced him to the johad, a large crescent-shaped dam made of earth and rocks.


These ancient structures—evidence of reservoirs to collect rainwater date back to 1500 BC —were designed not only to hold runoff from monsoon rains, but also help this water percolate into the ground and help improve the water table. But these large earthen structures require substantial manpower and are typically community projects.


Yet, after Singh's first success in Gopalpura, nearby villages needed little encouragement. "The idea spread like fire in the parched villages," Singh wrote in 2009. "Village people started approaching me for helping them to do the same in their areas."


Between 1985 and 2007, he recorded, some 8,600 such structures in over 1,068 villages across 6,500 square kilometres had been built by local communities working with the Tarun Bharat Sangh.


The impact of these johads was spectacular. The water table—the depth underground from where water may be extracted—rose from about 100 metres to between about 13 metres and 3 metres. The area under single cropping increased from 11% to 70%, and the area under double cropping went from 3% to 50%. Forest cover expanded from 7% to 40%.


In 2001, when Singh was awarded the Ramon Magsaysay Award, the citation mentioned:



Now, 4,500 working johads dot Alwar and ten adjacent districts. Fed by a protected watershed and the revitalising impact of the village reservoirs, five once-dormant rivers now flow year round. Land under cultivation has grown by five times and farm incomes are rising. For work, men no longer need to leave home. And for water, these days women need walk no farther than the village well.



Then, as now, the ancient johad has been at the heart of Singh's conservation work. And, with India's groundwater level drop precipitously and an increase in pollution levels, perhaps this humble, earthen dam can help stem the tide.