Latest news with #Lion'sManeJellyfish


Buzz Feed
10-07-2025
- General
- Buzz Feed
24 Rare Things People Caught On Camera
No, your eyes don't deceive you! These 22 photos are rare as heck — so much so, in fact, that the average person likely won't ever see these things IRL. So sit back, relax, and enjoy these 22 fascinating, FOMO-cleansing photos from across the web: This shot, which I'll let OP describe: "My uncle lit a firework which failed to launch but didn't fail to detonate." It looks like the portals from Avengers: Endgame. This person with a genetic condition called Alport Syndrome, whose eyes have been gradually losing color: This redditor revealed that the syndrome caused this macular hole to form in their eye. This photo of Galileo's middle finger, which has been preserved since 1737 and is on display at the Museo Galileo in Florence, Italy: These strange, bulbous mammatus storm clouds that were seen over Colorado: This lava formation around the West Kamokuna Skylight in Hawaii that looks quite literally like a portal to hell, complete with the souls of the damned being dragged down into it: This delicious-looking ice cream photo that was perfectly timed to catch the very first melty drop: This ocean "fog" that's actually an underwater lake (AKA a brine pool), which looks like that because the water in the "lake" is saltier and denser than the water around it: This photo from someone who got up close and personal with a washed-up Lion's Mane Jellyfish — aka one of the largest jellyfish species that we know of — off the Coast of Ireland: This ballot from the 1938 referendum in Nazi Germany, which had a massive "yes" circle and a much smaller "no" circle" to cast a vote in: Here's that same ballot after being run through Google Translate, also: As you could probably tell from the circles, in more ways than one, it wasn't a fair election. Nonetheless, according to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, 95% of eligible voters voted, and 90% approved, giving Hitler absolute power. This camera-less iPhone that's issued to people who work on nuclear plants (as no cameras are allowed): This photo a mother took of her son's hair, which is naturally half-curly and half-straight (which, TBH, I never really considered was something that could happen): This photo snapped by someone who accidentally stabbed their fingernail with a needle, resulting in it growing like this: This person who snapped a photo of the moment their lightbulb — unscrewed and unattached — was completely lit up: This shot of the entrance to Furnitureland South — a furniture store in High Point, North Carolina I only learned about five minutes ago and cannot stop thinking about now: This shot of the inside of a telephone cable, which I bet you've never seen before (because I sure as heck haven't): This washed-up angler fish, which usually lives deep in the 8,000+ feet deep: This un-edited photo of an orange gas cloud in the sky, which — according to the BBC — was a result of an "accident" at a nearby industrial plant. This photo a wife got of a bug landing on her husband and deciding his tee was the perfect spot to lay her eggs: This photo of a proud-looking Cassowary (a flightless bird native to Australia, New Guinea, and the Moluccas) and it's vibrant green eggs: This extra extra EXTRA long faucet coming from the ceiling, which is admittedly less exciting than some of the other photos in here, but damn, I bet you've never seen one of these in the flesh, huh? This photo of the lone row home — abandoned by its counterparts, which were likely bought out by developers — that remains: And finally, this photo that was unintentionally taken at juuuust the right time to make the fire look like a person: While some commenters said they saw the screaming Elmo meme, I personally see a woman dancing. What about you? Tell us in the comments! ⬇️
Yahoo
25-06-2025
- Climate
- Yahoo
Daily Weather Update from FOX Weather: Stifling heat wave begins to abate; 'ring of fire' to bring more storms
Welcome to the Daily Weather Update from FOX Weather. It's Wednesday, June 25, 2025. Start your day with everything you need to know about today's weather. You can also get a quick briefing of national, regional and local weather whenever you like with the FOX Weather Update podcast. A massive heat dome that sparked the first major heat wave of the summer brought record-breaking temperatures to cities from the Midwest to the Northeast this week, but some much-needed relief from the extreme weather is on the horizon. On Monday, 30 cities across the eastern half of the U.s. broke or tied century-old records, and another 11 cities did the same on Tuesday. Highs will once again climb into the mid- to upper 90s on Wednesday along the Interstate 95 corridor on the East Coast, but temperatures will moderate across the Northeast starting Thursday, with temperatures dropping back into the 70s by Friday. Rounds of severe storms will continue across the central and northern tier of the U.S. on Wednesday as a large dome of high pressure sits across the Southeast, the FOX Forecast Center said. These "ring of fire" storms will pop up with daytime heating into the afternoon, delivering rounds of potentially severe thunderstorms across areas from the Plains eastward into the mid-Atlantic. A separate area of severe weather is expected across the Southeast from Virginia through Florida. Severe weather made its presence known when a group of 20 people were struck by lightning while swimming at a South Carolina beach park Tuesday evening, emergency officials said. The thunderstorm swept through Lexington around 4:43 p.m. ET. One lightning bolt struck a group of eight adults and 12 children at Dominion Beach Park at Dreher Shoals Dam, according to a Lexington County spokesperson. Beachgoers in South Portland, Maine, came upon a curious sight over the weekend, when they spotted a large, orange-red jellyfish lurking in the shallow water. Known as a Lion's Mane Jellyfish, the animal is a member of the largest jellyfish species in the world, according to the Smithsonian. The specimen found in South Portland appeared as shaggy as its feline namesake, as hair-like components of its vivid crimson bell floated in the water. Here are a few more stories you might find interesting. Andrea dissipates in central Atlantic 12 hours after becoming first tropical storm of 2025 hurricane season Next tropical system likely to form this week in Eastern Pacific Ocean 2 people bitten by shark at tourist hotspot Hilton Head Island in less than a week Need more weather? Check your local forecast plus 3D radar in the FOX Weather app. You can also watch FOX Weather wherever you go using the FOX Weather app, at or on your favorite streaming article source: Daily Weather Update from FOX Weather: Stifling heat wave begins to abate; 'ring of fire' to bring more storms