In sweltering Brazil, worst-ever flooding killed dozens of people and paralyzed a city of about 4 million people. Voters and politicians in the world’s largest election in India are fainting in heat that hit as high as 115 degrees (46.3 degrees Celsius).
A brutal Asian heat wave has closed schools in the Philippines, killed people in Thailand and set records there and in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Maldives and Myanmar. Record temperatures — especially at night when it just won’t cool down — have hit many parts of Africa. Flooding devastated Houston, and the United States as a whole just had its second highest number of tornadoes for the month of April.
In a world growing increasingly accustomed to wild weather swings, the last few days and weeks have seemingly taken those environmental extremes to a new level. Some climate scientists say they are hard pressed to remember when so much of the world has had its weather on overdrive at the same time.
Related articles:
Related suggestion:
Forget Mars, are there aliens on… K2'Controlling' husband who stabbed his 19Pregnant Megan McKenna puts her luxury threeA tornado strikes the southern China metropolis of GuangzhouLong lines form and frustration grows as Cuba runs short of cashShips from Turkey planning to deliver aid to Gaza were denied right to sailRebel Wilson thanks people for 'acknowledging my experiences with Sacha Baron Cohen'South African Freedom Day: All you need to knowSZA and Keke Palmer are set to star in a buddy comedy from producer Issa RaeTenerife WILL slap holidaymakers with a tourist tax: Charges set to come in from January
3.2069s , 6497.6484375 kb
Copyright © 2024 Powered by From flooding in Brazil and Houston to brutal heat in Asia, extreme weather seems nearly everywhere ,Cultural Caravan news portal