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Extreme weather, fires befall nation

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Allison
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« on: May 10, 2007, 02:08:56 am »

Extreme weather, fires befall nation
By ROGER PETTERSON, Associated Press Writer
19 minutes ago



NEW YORK - Nature's fury made life miserable Wednesday from one end of the nation to the other, with people forced out of their homes by wildfires near both coasts and the Canadian border and by major flooding in the Midwest.


And although the calendar still said spring, the first named storm of the year was whipping up surf on the beaches of the Southeast.

Overall, it wasn't quite a day for the record books.

"It's a major flood,"        National Weather Service meteorologist Suzanne Fortin said Wednesday of the flooding in Missouri. "It won't be a record breaker, but it will be in the top three."

However, a three-week-old fire in southern Georgia had become that state's biggest in five decades after charring 167 square miles of forest and swamp.

Smoke-filled air created a burning smell and a dusting of ashes that coated cars and buildings through much of Florida and southeastern Georgia. The haze over most of Florida even closed several highways and sent people with breathing problems indoors.

The flooding was produced by the drenching weekend thunderstorms across the Plains states that also devastated Greensburg, Kan. In addition to 11 tornado deaths, two drowning deaths were blamed on the storms, one each in Oklahoma and Kansas.

High water had poured over the tops of at least 20 levees along the Missouri River and other streams in the state, authorities said Wednesday.

Missouri National Guard troops were helping. And Highway Patrol troopers were working 24-hour shifts near Big Lake, a village town of about 150 permanent residents in the state's northwest corner, which was inundated by five levee breaks along the Missouri River and four smaller ones on other streams, said patrol Lt. John Hotz.

No injuries were reported but the Missouri Water Patrol rescued about 20 people from their flooded homes, including Glenn Burger, who had the patrol return him to his home Wednesday to rescue his two pet cockatiels.

"I've had them about five years and I hated to lose them," said Burger, 78, who lived through floods in 1984 and 1993. "This is the last one. I'm through. I'm going to move to town."

In Missouri's Jackson County, authorities evacuated 300 to 400 residents of Levasy on Wednesday. At least a dozen homes were partially under water from the Missouri River, a dispatcher said.

In central Missouri, the state capital, Jefferson City, was preparing for flooding. After floods in 1993 and 1995, the city raised the elevation of its riverside sewage treatment plant, and the federal government bought out scores of homes on the north shore of the river, but the airport and businesses are still vulnerable.

On the West Coast, in view of many Los Angeles residents, a blaze had covered more than 800 acres in the city's sprawling Griffith Park behind the iconic Griffith Observatory.

The danger to homes south of the park eased Wednesday and many of the hundreds of residents evacuated overnight were allowed to return.

No flames were showing by evening, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa told a press conference at the observatory, and firefighters expected full containment by Thursday night.

"The tide is turning in our favor," the mayor said.

At least 30 companies of firefighters were to remain in case the 817-acre blaze came back to life.

The fire appeared to have been accidental, said Battalion chief John Miller, who oversees arson investigations.

The fire destroyed Dante's View, a trailside terraced garden on Mount Hollywood.

"This is a tragic sunrise," City Councilman Tom LaBonge said while surveying the damage. "You look right there and you'd think you were at the observatory looking at Mars."

In the Southeast, a wildfire in northern Florida's Bradford County had forced the evacuation of about 250 homes, said Annaleasa Winter, a state forestry spokeswoman. That fire had blackened 16,000 to 18,000 acres and was 35 percent contained on Wednesday night.

Florida Gov. Charlie Crist said the state had more than 220 active fires Wednesday that had charred a total of 125 square miles.

Officials in southeastern Georgia issued a mandatory evacuation Wednesday for an area including the town of Moniac, saying that by early Thursday it may be in the path of a 107,000-acre blaze, or 167 square miles, in the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, the largest recorded blaze since state record-keeping began in 1957.

Smoke was spreading across wide areas of Florida as wind circulated around Subtropical Storm Andrea, centered about 100 miles off the Georgia coast with top sustained wind around 45 mph. The National Weather Service forecast that the storm would show little movement and dissipate near the coast in four days.

Battling the blazes won't get much immediate help from rain. Forecasters said no significant downpours were expected over land through at least Thursday morning. The storm's lightning could also spark off more fires, meteorologists said.

Elsewhere, a wildfire near the Canadian border in northeastern Minnesota had covered more than 34 square miles Wednesday, adding more than 8 square miles in one day, authorities said. Since it was spotted over the weekend, it has destroyed 45 buildings, including multimillion-dollar homes, and firefighters said it was just 5 percent contained.

More than 100 people had been removed from their homes in the path of the fire.

_____

Associated Press writers Russ Bynum on Tybee Island, Ga., Amy Forliti along the Gunflint Trial in Minnesota, Heather Hollingsworth in Kansas City, Mo., Jeremiah Marquez in Los Angeles and Ron Word in Jacksonville, Fla. contributed to this report.
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Allison
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« Reply #1 on: May 10, 2007, 02:11:17 am »

Guess what?

Not only are higher temps related to global warming, but so are more powerful storms!  The tornado recorded in Kansas the other day was one of the biggest to ever touch down in the U.S., and it stayed on the ground for twenty miniutes!!!
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cleasterwood
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« Reply #2 on: May 10, 2007, 05:30:25 am »

Mother Nature is royally ticked off at us for destroying her all the years. 

I live in S. Florida and the fires are making breathing too difficult, the air reeks, and if the wind doesn't change soon I'll go stir crazy from being stuck inside.  For 3 days now we have been breathing in the rancid air.  It seems that every time they put out a fire, another one sprouts up in its place.  Our coastline deteriorated last week because of a pounding tide with 15' high waves.  Some beach side homes were destroyed.  To top it all off, we haven't had a good, hard, long rain in months and we can only water our lawns once a week!  Lake Occheechobee is almost 9' below normal.
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zaphod
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« Reply #3 on: May 10, 2007, 06:31:21 am »

If you believe in the predictions presented by this article, more than a few floridian beachfront homes are in  danger of disappearing.

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/2007-01-30-ipcc-report_x.htm
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