2014 Record Heat
Last year was the world's hottest since reliable records begun in the late 1800s, and was also likely the hottest in the history of human civilization, according to the Japan Meteorological Agency (JMA). The Tokyo-based agency is one of four worldwide that calculate global temperature trends in somewhat different ways. A day after the JMA announcement, the University of Alabama in Huntsville said 2014 was the third-warmest in the 36-year global satellite temperature record. But researchers there cautioned that the difference from previous hot years as measured by "not statistically different than zero." Data from other weather agencies pointed to unprecedented ocean warmth as the main driver of the new record atmospheric heat.
Fault in Our Sun
People born around the lowest point of the 11-year cycle of solar activity may live five years longer than those born when the sun is most energetic, according to new research. The team from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology wrote in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B that peaks of solar activity produce bursts of energetic particles rhat can increase levels of ultraviolet radiation on Earth. Those UV rays bring environmental stress known to cause cell and DNA damage, which can hamper survival and reproductive success. The researchers say there is a clear link between solar cycles and the lifespans of about 8,600 Norwegians studied through birth and death records dating from 1676 to 1878. Solar cycle peaks in recent history occurred in March 1958, November 1968, December 1979, July 1989 and March 2000.
Ebola's Source
A hollow tree in a Guinea village where the first known victim of the West African Ebola outbreak died in December 2013 may be ground zero for an epidemic that has now killed more than 8,000 people. The Ebola virus hides in what are known as reservoirs, such as wild animals that remain unaffected. Researchers think that infected bats living in the hollow tree 160 feet from the first victim's home were the source of the outbreak. They theorize that the toddler who was the first to die could have picked up the virus while playing in the tree, or he might have caught and played with an infected bat droppings. Local children have historically played with the bats and even grilled them for food.
New Year's Eruption
Mexico's famed Popcatepetl volcano exploded almost 30 times on Dec. 31, giving residents just southeast of Mexico City an early, natural New Year's fireworks display. Residents living within 6 miles of the towering mountain in Puebla state were asked to evacuate the area. Ash from the eruptions soared as high as 2 miles into the sky, according to Mexico's National Disaster Prevention Center.
Year-End Cyclone
At least 60 people perished in the southern Philippines from flash floods and landslides triggered by passing Tropical Storm Jangmi on Dec. 30. The storm packed wind gusts of 50 miles per hour as it also brought downpours to the islands of Mindanao, Palawan and Leyte. An official said 12 people died when a landslide buried two vans and six houses near a mountainside highway in Catbalogan City.
Earthquakes
A broad swath of Idaho was jolted by a 4.9 magnitude quake that triggered rock slides, damaged homes and knocked out power around Custer County. While there were no reports of injuries, several residents near the epicenter reported cracking in the walls of their homes.
* Much of metropolitan Dallas was jolted by an unusually strong tremor that many suspect was caused by a gas well near the epicenter. It was the latest in a series of tremors during recent weeks.
* Earth movements were also felt in northern parts of Los Angeles, northern Oklahoma, Canada's Vancouver Island, eastern Taiwan and New Zealand's South Island.
Predator and Play
A South African park ranger and guests were startled to see a real-life example of the Bible verse that predicts "the leopard will lie down with the young goat." The surprising encounter of a baby impala apparently befriending and frolicking with a leopard was videotaped for more than an hour at Kruger National Park. "In all my years of being a game ranger, I have never seen such an encounter, nor do I ever expect to see a repeat of it again," said ranger Estiaan Houy. "I felt amazed and honored to see such a rare and unexplainable sighting." Houy said that at no time did the impala show any sign of distress or fear. But wildlife experts point out that leopards often play with their prey, and that after the pair later walked into the bush together, things probably did not end well for the impala once the leopard got hungry.
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