Wednesday, March 18, 2009

more quaking

A 4.5 magnitude earthquake has been felt in Melbourne and eastern Victoria, 12 days after a similar tremor.
The tremor occurred about 5km northeast of Korumburra, 100km southeast of Melbourne, at 4.28pm (AEDT) on Wednesday.
The epicentre is in the same area of an earthquake with a magnitude of 4.6 on the Richter scale which hit on March 6.
The Seismology Research Centre said an aftershock sequence is expected to continue.
There have been no reports of damage and it is unlikely an earthquake of this magnitude and depth will cause any significant damage, the centre's website said.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Roo crash

A kangaroo has crashed through the bedroom window of a Canberra family's home before terrorising its unsuspecting occupants.The family, from the suburb of Garran in Canberra's south, were awoken in the early hours of Sunday when their pet dog began barking from the garden.Moments later, a kangaroo burst through a three metre high window of the house's master bedroom and onto the bed where Beat Ettlin, his partner Verity Beman and their nine-year-old daughter Beatrix lay."My initial thought when I was half awake was: it's a lunatic ninja coming through the window," Mr Ettlin told The Associated Press."It seems about as likely as a kangaroo breaking in."While the family took refuge under the blankets, the injured animal proceeded to jump on top of them, gouging holes in the furniture and smearing blood all over the walls.The next thing Mr Ettlin heard was his 10-year-old son Leighton screaming from his bed: "There's a 'roo in my room!'""I thought, this can be really dangerous for the whole family now," the 42-year-old said.A chef, originally from the Swiss city of Stans, Mr Ettlin followed the thrashing and bleeding two metre tall marsupial and wrestled it into a headlock before dragging it down the hallway and out the front door.Left wearing just his shredded underpants and with scratch marks on his leg and buttocks, Mr Ettlin described himself as "lucky"."I had just my Bonds undies on. I felt vulnerable," he said.As quickly as it had come, the kangaroo vanished into a nearby reserve and the family reported the intrusion to police and wildlife authorities.
Ms Beman praised her husband's courage and said she didn't know many men who would go head-to-head with a kangaroo."I think he's a hero, a hero in Bonds undies," she said.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Quaking Melbourne

Victoria's east has been rocked by an earth tremor,on 6/3/09 in the evening with residents reporting Melbourne buildings shaking across the metropolitan area.Geoscience Australia, which monitors earthquake activity, said the tremor measured magnitude 4.6 on the Richter scale , with the epicentre at Korumburra, about 90 kilometres south-east of Melbourne .The quake happened just before 9:00pm AEDT, and while there were no reports of injury, 000, media outlets and the Bureau of Meteorology were flooded with calls from people wanting to know what had happened.John Schneider, from Geoscience Australia, says the the region has not seen an earthquake of that magnitude in over a decade."The last earthquake of any significant size in that area was the magnitude 5 earthquake at Thomson Reservoir in 1996," he said.Terry Ryan from the Bureau of Meteorology says the quake was felt far from its epicentre."Mainly out to the eastern suburbs of Melbourne and places like Pakenham, Wonthaggi, towards Phillip Island ... have reported more sort of movement than the west," he said.Allan Griggs, from the State Emergency Service (SES), says 10 crews were sent to respond to calls for help with minor property damage."There's no reports of injury to the SES, however we have received approximately 30 calls for assistance across the state this evening," he said."Most of the calls have come from the Melbourne metropolitan area ... crews are now out just assessing the damage to these properties."It is reported as minor damage at this stage."Heather McPherson, of Launching Place, was one of the many people who felt the earth move."I nearly fell over," she said."I'm an artist and all my paintings fell off the wall - I had canvasses everywhere."I came out to pick them up and I had this shudder go through the floor."I've never felt anything like it in my life, I could barely stand up."James Sandman, of Drouin in Victoria's east, was watching TV at the time."The whole house absolutely shook, like the foundations shook," he said."The walls moved, they wobbled, and myself and my wife just looked at each other and we ... both then looked at the exits wondering do we need to get out."Greg Cotton was in his apartment in South Yarra at the time."It lasted for what seemed to be about two or three seconds. It was significant," he said."I've never felt the floor move and move me, and I've lived in this particular building for 15 years."Police say no injuries or major damage have been reported so far.

Saturday, February 21, 2009

COMET LULIN

Comet Lulin is approaching Earth and brightening rapidly. Observers say it is now visible to the naked eye as a faint (magnitude +5.6) gassy patch in the constellation Virgo before dawn. Even city dwellers have seen it. Backyard telescopes reveal a vivid green comet in obvious motion. Just yesterday, amateur astronomers watched as a solar wind gust tore away part of the comet's tail, the second time this month such a thing has happened. Lulin's closest approach to Earth (38 million miles) is on Feb. 24th; at that time the comet could be two or three times brighter than it is now.
photocourtesy of

Friday, February 20, 2009

PNG donates to Victoria's bush fire appeal

A remote Papua New Guinea village has donated money to the Victorian bushfire appeal almost a decade after Victorians came to their aid when a devastating tsunami killed thousands of locals.The small hospital town of Vanimo, in PNG's northwestern Sandaun province, gave 10,000 kina ($A5,567) to the Red Cross Victorian Bush Fire Appeal in a touching gesture of bonds forged through tragedy.The Aitape Tsunami in July 1998 killed more than 2,200 Sandaun villagers and made 10,000 homeless. But it was a medical team from Victoria's Monash Medical Centre, led by Dr Elizabeth Lewis, who were the first to help Vanimo's overstretched hospital.Vanimo Hospital chairman, Kevin Imba presented the cheque to Australia's High Commissioner to PNG, Chris Moraitis on Thursday in a small ceremony at the hospital."We want to pass on our deep thanks for what the people of Victoria have done for the people of Sandaun," Imba said."When we think of Australia we think fondly of Victoria and Victorians, so we offer our heartfelt condolences to those families affected in the recent bushfires."Moraitis said PNG's support of the Victorian Bushfire appeal was "touching"."This is an extraordinarily generous gesture by the board and staff of Vanimo Hospital," he said"You face significant logistical and operational challenges running this hospital here, yet you have found it in your hearts to help the families affected by the bushfires, so this donation is particularly touching," he said.Last week the PNG government gave $2 million to bushfire and flood relief, while locally PNG residents have been collecting money for the Red Cross appeal.More than 200 people died in what is Australia's worst bushfire disaster in history.The fires destroyed homes, towns and forest in southeastern Victoria.

This gesture by the people of PNG is more than touching because these people have less to give than most of the developed countries of the world . It is a truly spectacular thing for them to do.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Fire photos

The blaze approaches, heaven help that which is its path.The smoke is thick and the fire is a swirling inferno, a fire storm of unimaginable proportions


Burning trees and smoke fills the forrestThe courageous men and women of the volunteer, yes, thats volunteer, bush fire brigade
Firestorm going through the Bunyip state forrest.
The aftermath, burnt out cars at Marysville, an idylic spot in the mountains, no more, completely burnt out with many lives lost.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Victoria's fires


Surviving residents of Marysville, where up to 100 more people are feared killed in Australia's bushfires,(currently 189 and still more are expected to be found) are still being kept out of town to shield them from traumatic scenes there, authorities said on Wednesday.The rising death toll in Australia's deadliest bushfires now stands at 181, but could exceed 200, authorities say. If the Marysville deaths are confirmed, the toll may reach 300.A firefighter who drove through Marysville only 10 minutes before the firestorm hit on Saturday night said people banged on the side of his water tanker, begging his team to help people trapped in burning houses.Victoria state Premier John Brumby said Marysville, which has been off-limits since the weekend fires, would remain so because of the likelihood of ghastly sights in the once idyllic town."There are still many deceased people in homes," he said, adding between 50 and 100 may be dead in Marysville."If people return to those areas ... and there are still deceased persons there ... the impact would be quite devastating."Forensic police sifted through ash and the twisted remains of houses in Marysville, Kinglake and other towns razed by fires trying to identify the hundreds killed."You have to go street by street, house by house. There are many houses that have collapsed," said Victoria state Police Commissioner Christine Nixon, adding it would take weeks to complete the search.Some of those killed were burned so badly by fires that reached four storeys high they may never be identified."In some of these cases, it will be weeks before positive identification can be made and, I'm advised by the coroner, it may be virtually impossible to officially identify the bodies."The fires tore through rural towns north of Melbourne on Saturday night, fanned by strong winds and heatwave temperatures. Melbourne's temperature on Saturday hit 46.4 degrees Celsius (115.5 degrees Fahrenheit), a record for the city.The disaster area, more than twice the size of London and encompassing more than 20 towns north of Melbourne , has been declared a crime zone. The fires have burned 1,033 homes and left 5,000 people homeless.More than 4,000 firefighters are still battling some 33 fires in Victoria state, with 23 of those still out of control.Two major fires east of Melbourne are threatening to join and if so would pose a major risk to water and gas from the Thompson Reservoir and Longford gas plant, which supply Australia's second largest city. Hundreds of kilometers of control lines were being built to keep the fires apart, fire officials said."We continue to be in a fire crisis," Prime Minister Kevin Rudd told parliament.Police have launched the nation's biggest arson investigation, "Operation Phoenix," and posted a A$100,000 reward for information leading to the conviction of anyone for deliberately starting a bushfire.The tragedy is the worst natural disaster in Australia in 110 years. The previous worst bushfire was the Ash Wednesday fires of 1983 that killed 75 people.The fires have increased pressure on the prime minister to take firm action on climate change as scientists blamed global warming for conditions that fueled the disaster.Australia is the most fire-prone country on earth, scientists say. Most of its bushfires are ignited by lightning. Fire officials monitor lightning strikes and any fire that does not correspond with a strike is assumed to be started by people, either accidentally or deliberately.

Victoria has ordered a Royal Commission of Inquiry to probe all aspects of the bushfires, including safety guidelines.Officials say the golden rule of surviving forest fires is to evacuate early or stay and defend their homes, but experts say that it appears many victims panicked and fled at the worst time. Some were incinerated in cars as they tried to outrun the flames.