Contained within every quantum field are self-organizing forces that give relative measure and validity to a countless number of interactions that when in harmony, provide unlimited opportunities for the formation of light/energy. This photonic light/energy/information field contains all the probabilities that engulf an infinite array of possibilities, i.e. potentialities, of contact with countless other “light forces” within the realm of its influence.
November 5th, 2012 (InsideCostaRica.com) Costa Rica’s National Emergency Response (CNE) has issued a warning for those who live between 2 and 5 kilometers distance from the Turrialba Volcano.
Research presented by the National Seismology Network, the University of Costa Rica and CNE stresses the importance and urgency in repairing the only evacuation route, as well as building shelters inside the park.
Just one week after Superstorm Sandy, a Nor'easter is poised to produce high winds, some coastal flooding, rain, and even some wet snow in parts of the Northeast.
What follows is a city-by-city look at forecast impacts.
To watch the video and read the rest of this story, visit Weather.com.
In this file photo from October 2011, makeshift homes lie submerged in floods in Lagos, Nigeria, where more than 360 people have lost their lives in floods over the past several months. PIUS UTOMI EKPEI/AFP/Getty Images
LAGOS, Nigeria — Nigeria's National Emergency Management Agency says 363 people died over months of flooding across the West African nation and 2.1 million others were displaced.
The agency made the announcement Monday as Nigeria's annual rainy season is coming to an end. The report covered July through the end of October.
To read the rest of this story, visit Weather.com.
Weather.com - 11/5/12, Bruce Henderson, The Charlotte Observer
People walk on North Carolina 12 away from the buckling of the highway, pounded by surf, leading into Mirlo Beach in Rodanthe, N.C. on Oct. 30. AP Photo/The Virginian-Pilot, Steve Earley
North Carolina state legislators last summer ignored research that shows sea-level rise will accelerate its creep up North Carolina's coastline this century.
This week, waves of science will say they were wrong. To watch the video and read the rest of this story, visit Weather.com.