This is from the article about this..sorry I cant post the link
A heatwave in northern Siberia has brought something living to the surface, sparking an outburst that hasn't taken place in the region since 1941. An outbreak of anthrax -- a bacterial infection -- has left a 12-year-old boy dead, infecting 21 others, ABC News reports. Officials have linked the resurfacing to the region's melting Arctic permafrost, which recently thawed the carcasses of anthrax-infected deer from roughly 75 years ago, Bloomberg reports. Though the deer didn't survive, the bacteria remained dormant until warmer temperatures reactivated it. This infectious disease can survive in hibernation for decades, Bloomberg notes.
Most people do have them, I have double paned windows but no shutters so if one drops down, I can still hide in the basement
I was in middle of a tornado years ago further to the mountain area..it stayed on the ground one hour, was 3 miles wide, blackest sky I ever did see Thankfully I had a basement to crawl into then too
When I was 19 this cute guy took me on a sleigh ride in middle of winter. It was very romantic, snow lightly falling all around..bonfire was toasty and warm. All in all it was a night I will remember
1. Your reading this right now. 2. Your realizing that is a stupid fact. 4. You didn't realize I skipped three. 5. Your checking now. 6. Your smiling. 7. Your still reading this even though its stupid. 9. You didn't realize I skipped eight. 10.Your checking again and smiling about how you fell for it again. 11.Your enjoying this. 12.You didn't realize there's only suppose to be 10 facts.
Deer Zombies
oops...WWII..hows that Jimmy?This is from the article about this..sorry I cant post the link
A heatwave in northern Siberia has brought something living to the surface, sparking an outburst that hasn't taken place in the region since 1941.
An outbreak of anthrax -- a bacterial infection -- has left a 12-year-old boy dead, infecting 21 others, ABC News reports.
Officials have linked the resurfacing to the region's melting Arctic permafrost, which recently thawed the carcasses of anthrax-infected deer from roughly 75 years ago, Bloomberg reports.
Though the deer didn't survive, the bacteria remained dormant until warmer temperatures reactivated it. This infectious disease can survive in hibernation for decades, Bloomberg notes.
Yikes!