Saturday, October 31, 2009

Monday, October 12, 2009

Anggota polis nyaris tertelan kaca


SERPIHAN kaca yang disangka air batu dalam minuman seorang anggota polis di Kuala Lumpur baru-baru ini.

KUALA LUMPUR - Sangkakan air batu, rupa-rupanya serpihan kaca!

Itu yang terjadi kepada seorang anggota polis yang nyaris tertelan kaca sepanjang empat sentimeter di dalam teh ais yang diminumnya di sebuah restoran di Taman Wahyu, Jalan Ipoh dekat sini baru-baru ini.

Dalam kejadian pada pukul 1.30 tengah hari itu, mangsa, Ismail Abu Bakar, 27, berkunjung ke restoran tersebut untuk makan tengah hari bersama rakan-rakannya.

"Apabila makanan sampai kami terus menikmati hidangan tersebut. Selepas selesai makan kami duduk bersembang sambil menghabiskan baki minuman.

"Saya agak hairan apabila melihat terdapat satu ketulan air batu agak pelik di dalam minuman saya, apabila diamati betul-betul saya terkejut kerana objek itu ialah kaca daripada serpihan gelas," katanya kepada Kosmo! semalam.

Menurut Ismail, dia kemudian memanggil pemilik restoran terbabit untuk mendapatkan penjelasan namun pemilik restoran itu menyatakan dia tidak tahu mengenai perkara itu.
Read More

Awan bentuk imej cincin


GAMBAR menunjukkan awan membentuk imej cincin di langit Moscow

MOSCOW - Sebahagian penduduk Rusia menyaksikan satu fenomena unik apabila imej seperti cincin yang bersinar terbentuk di langit di sini, lapor sebuah akhbar semalam.

Imej itu dirakamkan oleh seorang penduduk pada Rabu lalu dan boleh dilihat menerusi laman web YouTube.

Bagaimanapun, seorang pegawai meteorologi menafikan kejadian itu berlaku akibat kuasa ghaib.

Menurut seorang jurucakap agensi meteorologi di sini, kejadian itu disebabkan oleh kesan maya pada pandangan mata.

"Ia merupakan satu kesan maya walaupun kelihatan seperti mengagumkan.

"Jika anda melihat dengan lebih dekat, anda akan mendapati terdapat sinaran matahari yang datang melalui awan itu," katanya. - Agensi
Read More

Guatemala Sinkhole




February 26, 2007—After rumbling for weeks, part of a poor Guatemala City neighborhood plummeted some 30 stories into the Earth on Friday.

The reportedly 330-foot-deep (100-meter-deep) sinkhole swallowed about a dozen homes and is so far blamed in the deaths of three people—two teenagers, found floating in torrent of sewage, and their father, who was pulled from the chasm.

Rainstorms and a ruptured sewer main may have caused the sinkhole, officials in Guatemala told the Associated Press. After the collapse, the seemingly bottomless depths gave off tremors, sounds of flowing water, and the scent of sewage.

Sinkholes can occur when underground rocks that can be dissolved by water—such as salt, gypsum, and limestone—are inundated. The removal of groundwater can also leave gaps underground that can lead to sinkholes.

While the cause of the Guatemala City abyss remains uncertain, it's effects are undeniable.

Police established a 500-yard (457-meter) no-go zone around the sinkhole, and nearly a thousand people were forced to evacuate—some perhaps forever.

"Last night a friend had to take my handicapped wife out on motorcycle," 15-year resident Antonio Fuentes, 50, told the Associated Press. "Now I'm leaving for good, never to come back."

—Ted Chamberlain
Read More

Recent Post

© 2011 ~Menempuh Arus Masa-Life-Photography~, AllRightsReserved.

Designed by ScreenWritersArena