The wildfire season around the world came to an abrupt end in September with sheets of water and widespread flooding. Furthermore, the increase in electrical phenomena, such as rare tornadoes, waterspouts, severe storms, and lightning, was evident this month.
In the United States, Hurricane Ida made landfall near Corpus Christi as a Category 1 storm with sustained winds up to 75 mph. The resulting high tides caused extensive coastal flood damage from Texas to Louisiana. Meanwhile, in India, heavy monsoon rains triggered severe flooding and mudslides that claimed over two dozen lives across the country. In South Africa, a similar weather system brought record-breaking rain which led to widespread power outages as well as road closures due to landslides.
The incredible amount of water and unexpected hailstorms also damaged a significant amount of crops in the Northern Hemisphere, as in the case of Valencia, Spain, where 54,000 acres were destroyed, causing losses of 43 million euros.
Excessive rainfall also damaged large areas of crops in the United States, Canada, India, Australia, China and parts of South and Southeast Asia.
Other flooding events worth mentioning this month:
- Shenzhen, China - Record 18 inches of rainfall in just 12 hours
- Rio Grande Do Sul, Brazil - 37 dead after unusually heavy rain and floods
- Central Greece - Unusual heavy rain and floods caused widespread damage - 10 dead (2nd event in 3 weeks)
- Astara, Iran - 10 inches of rain in just 12 hours
- Turkey’s Black Sea region - Deadly flash floods triggered 1000 landslides
- New York City, US - Spain - 9.4 inches of rainfall in 24 hours
- Massachusets, US - 11 inches of rain in just 6 to 7 hours
- Arizona, US - 4 inches of rainfall in just 2 hours
- Jalisco, Mexico - Sudden floods eave 7 people dead and 9 missing
We also need to pay attention to the skies, as there has been an increase in meteor fireballs this month. At the same time, we need to be aware of some unusual explosions around the world that could be caused by meteorites, as was the case with a warehouse in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. Some media outlets blamed lightning for the explosion, and that’s not too far of an assumption due to the number of strong lightning events around the world, but we can’t rule out that it was caused by a meteorite. Witnesses reported a light in the sky and a loud explosion just before the fire.
All this, and more, in this month’s SOTT Earth Changes Summary.