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Joplin, Memorial Day 2011

This image from Joplin puts things in perspective on this Mem... on Twitpic
Flash Flood Warning
Thursday, Jul 28, 2:03 PM to 5:00 PM Central
ID#: 281903
NWS Ofice: KLIX
Counties: Jefferson Parish, LA
WGUS54 KLIX 281903
FFWLIX
LAC051-282200-
/O.NEW.KLIX.FF.W.0022.110728T1903Z-110728T2200Z/
/00000.0.ER.000000T0000Z.000000T0000Z.000000T0000Z.OO/

BULLETIN - EAS ACTIVATION REQUESTED
FLASH FLOOD WARNING
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE NEW ORLEANS LA
203 PM CDT THU JUL 28 2011

THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN NEW ORLEANS HAS ISSUED A

* FLASH FLOOD WARNING FOR...
NORTHWESTERN JEFFERSON PARISH IN SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA...
THIS INCLUDES THE CITIES OF...METAIRIE...KENNER...

* UNTIL 500 PM CDT

* AT 158 PM CDT...NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE DOPPLER RADAR INDICATED
FLASH FLOODING FROM A THUNDERSTORM OVER THE WARNED AREA.

* THE STORM PRODUCING FLASH FLOODING WILL OTHERWISE REMAIN OVER
MAINLY RURAL AREAS OF THE INDICATED PARISH.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

RADAR ESTIMATES OF 2 TO 3 INCHES HAVE ALREADY FALLEN OVER SOME AREAS
AND ADDITIONAL RAINFALL AMOUNTS OF 1 TO 3 INCHES ARE POSSIBLE IN THE
WARNED AREA.

EXCESSIVE RUNOFF FROM HEAVY RAINFALL WILL CAUSE FLOODING OF SMALL
CREEKS AND STREAMS...URBAN AREAS...HIGHWAYS...STREETS AND UNDERPASSES
AS WELL AS OTHER DRAINAGE AREAS AND LOW LYING SPOTS.

DO NOT DRIVE YOUR VEHICLE INTO AREAS WHERE THE WATER COVERS THE
ROADWAY. THE WATER DEPTH MAY BE TOO GREAT TO ALLOW YOUR CAR TO CROSS
SAFELY. MOVE TO HIGHER GROUND.

A FLASH FLOOD WARNING MEANS THAT FLOODING IS IMMINENT OR OCCURRING.
IF YOU ARE IN THE WARNING AREA MOVE TO HIGHER GROUND IMMEDIATELY.
RESIDENTS LIVING ALONG STREAMS AND CREEKS SHOULD TAKE IMMEDIATE
PRECAUTIONS TO PROTECT LIFE AND PROPERTY. DO NOT ATTEMPT TO CROSS
SWIFTLY FLOWING WATERS OR WATERS OF UNKNOWN DEPTH BY FOOT OR BY
AUTOMOBILE.



LAT...LON 2991 9027 2992 9027 3006 9028 3006 9027
3003 9015 2990 9014
Event location map

2011-06-19 11:02:09 - Extreme Weather - USA

EDIS Code:ST-20110619-31210-USA
Date&Time:2011-06-19 11:02:09 [UTC]
Continent:North-America
Country:USA
State/Prov.:State of Wisconsin,
Location:Chippewa Valley,
City:
Damage level: Moderate (Level 2)
Not confirmed information!
Description:
A powerful line of storms hit the Chippewa Valley Saturday night. The worst of the storms hit between 7 and 10 pm, with an amazing 4.66" of rain falling at the Chippewa Valley Regional Airport during that time frame. Winds also gusted to 51 mph at the airport at the height of the storms. The strong winds did damage to a number of areas, and Xcel energy reported widespread power outages Saturday evening. Flash flooding was also reported on a number of streets in Eau Claire. Both Eau Claire and Chippewa county were under a Flash Flood Warning until 3 am Sunday morning. It was the very slow movement of the storms that accounted for the high rain totals. The storms trained over the same areas, meaning they developed over an area and remained there for close to 2 hours. The forecast for Father's Day does show improvement. We could have some showers and storms early in the day, but the afternoon and evening look dry.
Event location map

2011-06-14 05:04:50 - Tornado - Australia


EDIS Code: TO-20110614-31144-AUS
Date&Time: 2011-06-14 05:04:50 [UTC]
Continent: Australia & New-Zealand
Country: Australia
State/Prov.: State of New South Wales,
Location: ,
City: Red Rock
Damage level: Moderate (Level 2)

Not confirmed information!
Description:
A mini-tornado has hit a small coastal town in northern New South Wales, as wild weather continues to batter the region. Residents say the whirlwind hit Red Rock, north of Coffs Harbour, shortly before 7:00am (AEST). The bowling club lost part of its roof and about 10 homes were also damaged in the small town. Joe Hanson lives across the road from the bowling club. "The tornado or waterspout or whatever it was it cut across through the dunes, across the bowling club, took the roof, then went into a couple of houses across the main street of Red Rock and lifted the roof off one of those houses," Mr Hanson said. "That's a brand new house so they've lost their roof. Just left a path of destruction, so pretty full on. Yeah, it was intense." Another resident, Sue Miller, says the weather had already been atrocious. "We had torrential rain all night and then all of a sudden it got extremely extremely heavy and we heard loud bangs and minor explosive things happening and then realised that roofs had been taken off houses," Ms Miller said. "It was just getting light and in fact as soon as it happened everything went quite quiet and the rain virtually stopped. It was quite eerie for a bit there." Dennis Houghton, from the State Emergency Service, says communities at Sandy Beach, Emerald Beach and Woolgoolga were also hit hard. "From fairly substantial roof damage through to general roof damage in areas around Woolgoolga and Corindi, and also a lot of water damage, where we're doing a lot of sandbagging at the moment," Mr Houghton said. "Normally the area does OK in heavy rain, but when we get extremely strong winds with that, that's when we tend to get significant damage." There are no reported injuries from the storm.

A Joplin doctor said Thursday his hospital treated five Joplin tornado victims for a rare, aggressive fungal infection

Aggressive fungus strikes Joplin tornado victims
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JOPLIN, Mo. (AP) -- A Joplin doctor said Thursday his hospital treated five Joplin tornado victims for a rare, aggressive fungal infection sometimes found in survivors of other natural disasters.
Dr. Uwe Schmidt, an infectious disease specialist at Freeman Health System in Joplin, said three of those patients who contracted zygomycosis have since died, but he stopped short of blaming their deaths specifically on the infections.
"These people had multiple traumas, pneumonia, all kinds of problems," Schmidt said. "It's difficult to say how much the fungal infections contributed to their demise."
Jacqueline Lapine, a spokeswoman for the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services, said the department has received reports of eight suspected deep-skin fungal infections among victims of the tornado. She said all of the victims had sustained trauma from the tornado with multiple injuries and secondary wound infections.
Zygomycosis, now known as mucormycosis, is a fungal infection that spreads rapidly and can be caused by soil or vegetative material becoming embedded under the skin. It's more prevalent in people with weakened immune systems or untreated diabetes but can affect healthy people who suffer trauma and are injected with contaminated soil.
Dr. Benjamin Park with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said people who have had a traumatic skin injury that is not improving should seek medical attention immediately so the infection can be identified and treated promptly.
"These fungal infections are usually quite serious, and often have a case-fatality rate of 50 percent or higher," Park said in an email to The Associated Press. "Although persons with weakened immune systems and those with diabetes are the most common risk groups, otherwise healthy people can develop infection, particularly after a traumatic wound. Skin infection usually occurs following traumatic inoculation of the fungal spores into the skin."
Schmidt said he had seen only two cases of zygomycosis in his 30 years of practice, and both of those cases involved people with untreated diabetes.
"I never have seen personally this kind of fungal infection of the skin," he said.
Stacy Fender, a spokeswoman for CoxHealth, said Cox South hospital in Springfield has one patient who may have a fungal infection.
Overall numbers weren't available. The health department in Springfield-Greene County, where some patients were treated, declined to release information about patients sickened by the fungus, citing patient privacy concerns.
The Springfield News-Leader reported the department sent a memo Monday to area health providers warning them to be on the lookout for the infections.
Kendra Williams, the administrator of community health and epidemiology for the health department, said the fungus likely came from soil or vegetative materials imbedded in the skin by the tornado.
In the aftermath of the tornado, Freeman Health System treated more than 1,700 patients. Doctors from St. John's Hospital, which was hit by the twister, treated patients at makeshift facilities.
Schmidt said some wounds that were stitched up had to be reopened because they weren't adequately cleaned.
"These were very extensive wounds," Schmidt said. "They were treated in the emergency room as quickly as possible."
A week after the tornado patients began arriving with fungal infections.
"We could visibly see mold in the wounds," Schmidt said. "It rapidly spread. The tissue dies off and becomes black. It doesn't have any circulation. It has to be removed."
Schmidt said the infection is sometimes seen in survivors of mass trauma such as the 2004 tsunami in Indonesia.
"This fungus invades the underlying tissue and actually invades the underlying blood vessels and cuts off the circulation to the skin," Schmidt said. "It's very invasive."
---
Information from: Springfield News-Leader, http://www.news-leader.com

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