6,000-MILE SAHARA DUST PLUME IS NOW COVERING MILLIONS OF PEOPLE
What began along the west coast of Africa has now expanded into a massive plume stretching more than 6,000 miles across the Atlantic.
The dust is now affecting parts of the Caribbean, Mexico, Central America, the southern United States, southern Canada, and northern Venezuela. When these events become this large, they can reduce air quality, create hazy skies, suppress tropical development, and even contribute to hotter daytime temperatures by trapping heat near the surface.
This is one of those events that’s impossible to ignore because of just how much of the globe it now covers.
👇 Can you see the haze or notice a difference in the air where you are?
#MrMBB333 #SaharaDust #DustPlume #AirQuality
I was shooting storms in some prime jet conditions in Oklahoma, and almost got a gigantic jet right by me. This is one of those cloud-top features that could develop into a GJ with just a little more juice. Crazy and beautiful plasma
It appears a large earthquake could be gearing up to strike China. Six magnitude 5.0+ aftershocks for a single M6.3 is very odd. I would say there is a much heightened risk of a magnitude 6.8-7.0+ earthquake in this area in the near future.
As you can clearly see (right side), we're in a global burst of seismic activity at the moment, starting with the M7.8 Philippines, and then after a seven day break we had the M6.7 Indonesia, M6.3 China, M6.6 Mid-Atlantic, and now the M6.6 Kamchatka. Boomshakalaka!
https://t.co/50rtRVDTJy
PEOPLE COULDN’T EXPLAIN WHAT APPEARED IN THE TEXAS SKY
Something unusual appeared high above East Texas in the early morning sky.
The object seemed to glow while shifting through multiple colors, but what caught the witness’s attention most was its apparent square-shaped appearance.
According to Vera, the object made no sound, wasn’t a helicopter, wasn’t an airplane, and didn’t appear to be a drone as it was remarkably quiet.
Living in a very remote rural area of East Texas, she says she has spent years watching the skies and has never seen anything like this before, either day or night.
As the object continued changing colors high above the landscape, it left her searching for answers.
👇
What do YOU think was captured over East Texas?
#MrMBB333 #TexasSky #UAP
New York City is slowly sinking under the immense load of its urban infrastructure. With more than one million buildings spread across its five boroughs, the city ranks among the heaviest urban areas on the planet. Researchers estimate that these structures collectively weigh about 1.68 trillion pounds (762 billion kilograms), roughly the same as 1.9 million fully loaded Boeing 747 aircraft.
This enormous mass is contributing to a geological process called subsidence, in which land gradually sinks over time. On average, New York City is subsiding at a rate of 1 to 2 millimeters (0.04 to 0.08 inches) per year, with some neighborhoods experiencing faster rates of up to 4.5 millimeters (0.18 inches) annually.
While the buildings play a significant role, they are not the only factor. Many areas rest on soft soils, clay layers, or artificial fill that compress more readily under pressure. Additional influences include groundwater fluctuations and the long-term effects of post-glacial rebound from the last Ice Age.
Individually, these small annual shifts may seem minor. However, when combined with rising sea levels, which are increasing faster than the global average around New York — the relative risk of flooding grows steadily. Low-lying coastal neighborhoods, infrastructure, transportation networks, and waterfront areas are particularly vulnerable.
New York is not unique in this regard. Many major global cities, including Jakarta, Shanghai, Mexico City, and parts of Tokyo, are also experiencing notable subsidence.
Although the process occurs too slowly for daily notice, its cumulative effects over decades can be substantial. New York’s iconic skyscrapers are not at risk of sudden collapse, and the city faces no imminent disappearance. Still, this phenomenon serves as a compelling reminder that even the world’s greatest metropolises remain subject to the slow, powerful forces of geology.
[Parsons, T., et al. (2023). "The Weight of New York City: Possible Contributions to Subsidence From the Built Environment." Earth's Future. DOI: 10.1029/2022EF003465]
🚨: The most important sky events of this decade is occurring on July 17th. 🌌 ✨
Six planets will align and put on a show of our lifetime. Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn will be visible to the naked eye from almost anywhere.
Uranus and Neptune will be visible to naked eye if seen from dark places.
MARK YOUR CALENDERS; July 17th. 📅✨
🚨 BREAKING: A massive meteor exploded over Massachusetts, releasing the energy of over 300 tons of TNT
The blinding daytime fireball literally shook homes across the region.
While many initially feared a major explosion, attack linked to the ongoing war in Iran, or an earthquake, NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey just confirmed the culprit. It was a celestial object — a three-foot-wide meteor.
The space rock was traveling at an astronomical 75,000 mph when it entered the atmosphere, creating a brilliant daylight streak visible from Canada down to Delaware.
The meteor fragmented roughly 40 miles above northeastern Massachusetts and southeastern New Hampshire, releasing a shockwave equivalent to 300 tons of TNT. This massive atmospheric breakup produced a powerful sonic boom that registered on seismic sensors but left no physical impact on the ground. Captured by NOAA's GOES-19 weather satellite, the rare daytime event provided scientists and skywatchers with a dramatic reminder of the immense energy packed by even small cosmic visitors.
source: Byrd, D. (2026). BOOM over Massachusetts and U.S. East probably a meteor. EarthSky.
Roughly 790,000 years ago a 2 km asteroid scattered tektite glass across up to 30 percent of Earth's surface, and the crater is still missing.
The Australasian strewn field is the largest debris zone on Earth, with melted glass scattered from southern China across Southeast Asia and Australia all the way to Antarctica.
🔹2 km wide meteorite
🔹Hit roughly 790,000 years ago
🔹Debris stretches across 3 continents
🔹Crater missing despite a century of hunting
🔹Tektite glass scattered from China to Antarctica
A 2 km asteroid hit Earth at an oblique angle and threw molten glass over an area larger than Africa, Europe, and Australia combined, all from a single cataclysmic impact.
Mainstream has searched for over a 100 years across Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand, southern China, and even offshore in the Indian Ocean, and come up empty every time.
And the thing most people miss is that the impact crater is most likely buried under 1,000 feet of volcanic lava in southern Laos, which is why it stayed hidden for a century.
An asteroid that reshaped Earth's surface can hide under a sheet of lava.
How many other impacts that shaped this planet are still hiding under modern landscapes?
RARE PLANETARY ALIGNMENT WILL LIGHT UP THE SKY THIS WEEKEND
Starting tonight, skywatchers around the world may be able to witness something incredible just after sunset.
Jupiter, Venus, and Mercury are now aligning in the western sky — with the rare conjunction expected to peak June 8–9.
The three planets will appear unusually close together in the same section of sky, creating a bright celestial lineup that some people may mistake for something far more mysterious.
And the best part?
You won’t need a telescope.
As long as skies stay clear in your location, the alignment should become visible shortly after sunset looking WEST.
👇
If you catch it… drop your photos/videos below.
#MrMBB333 #PlanetaryAlignment #Venus #Jupiter #Mercury