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Study finds wind turbines have impact on farm fields

Ag/Outdoor, News

December 19th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

The impact of wind turbines on the state’s energy production is well documented, and now an Iowa State University study is trying to determine the impact they may have on  Iowa’s crops.  I-S-U Distinguished Professor of agronomy, Gene Takle set out to find out if the relatively new giant rotating blades made an impact on a variety of conditions in nearby farm fields.

“Differences in micrometeorlogical conditions, differences in temperature, wind speed, wind direction humidity,  carbon dioxide levels — these are some of the things that we measure up wind and down wind of turbines,” Takle explains. ” And the simple answer is yes, we can measure some differences.”

While the early research shows some changes, Takle says it’s only a small part of the research right now. “The more complicated question as to whether these have an impact on biomass production, plant size, plant yield, those are more difficult and we haven’t found anything out about those yet,” Takle says.

He says they set up a tower to measure the changes in the air over the fields “We found that in general the landscape downwind of the turbines is slightly warmer at night and slightly cooler during the day. The amount of that is maybe a one-degree warming at night, and maybe a  half-degree celsius cooling during the day — so it isn’t a large effect,” according to Takle.

One result of the changes could be less dew forming on the plants. “Which would be generally a good thing because dew promotes growth of fungus and mold and some pathogens that crops are generally affected by,” Takle says. He says they found the turbines slowed the wind over the fields. “And this in meteorological terms that leads to a surface convergence. And that means that by laws of physics that there must be an upward motion over the windfarm,” Takle says.   “..and it could have significance in that it could affect fog and cloudiness or rainfall if it is on a large enough scale.”

The research was done behind a couple of rows of turbines. “We have not gone to look at the regional scale say of 150 or 200 turbines, the impact that might have,” Takle says. “But that is an very interesting question and one that we are pursuing, because it could have some significance.”

He says it’s going to  be much harder to find those answers because of all the other factors at play in a field — such as variations in soil quality or precipitation. It was announced earlier this year that from July of 2015 to July of 2016 35-point-eight percent of Iowa’s electricity was generated by wind.

(Radio Iowa)

Hamburg man arrested Monday morning on burglary, theft & other charges

News

December 19th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

A man wanted in connection with numerous burglaries and a previous narcotics investigation in Fremont County, was arrested early this (Monday) morning in Hamburg after a scuffle with Deputies. Sheriff Kevin Aistrope reports 48-year old John Tracy Miller, of Hamburg, was arrested after an altercation with Deputies who served a search and arrest warrant on Miller at his home located in the 1500 block of Washington Street.

Miller faces charges that include Delivery of Methamphetamine and Interference with Official Acts. He also has pending Burglary and Theft charges.  He was transported to the Fremont County Jail and held on a $50,000 cash bond.

John Tracy Miller

VERNON A. LARSEN, 91, of Audubon (Svcs. 12/22/16)

Obituaries

December 19th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

VERNON A. LARSEN, 91, of Audubon, died Sat., Dec. 17th, at the Friendship Home in Audubon. Funeral services for VERNON LARSEN will be held 10:30-a.m. Thursday, Dec. 22nd, at the Kessler Funeral Home, in Audubon.

Friends may call at the funeral home, where the family visitation is from 6-until 7:30-p.m. Wed., Dec. 21st.

Burial will be in the Manning City Cemetery, in Manning.

VERNON LARSEN is survived by:

His wife – Dorothy Larsen, of Audubon.

His daughter – Gloria (Judson) Requist, of Stanton.

His sister – Evie Scott, of Audubon.

2 grandchildren, 3 great-grandchildren, other relatives, his in-laws, and friends.

Body found under bridge in Fremont County is ID’d

News

December 18th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

The Fremont County Sheriff’s Office, Sunday, released the identity of the man whose body was discovered by a group of hunters Dec. 11th beneath the Highway 2 Missouri River bridge, at the Waubonsie Access Wildlife Management Area.

Deputies and officials with the Iowa Office of the State Medical Examiner, in Ankeny, determined 39-year old Larry Eugene Burns II, of Lamar, Colorado, died from blunt force trauma associated with a fall, and hypothermia.  Toxicology reports will not be completed for approximately 6 weeks.

Deputies determined Burns was walking on the westbound shoulder of the Highway 2 bridge when the fall occurred.  Deputies determined Burns had last spoken to relatives around Nov. 22nd, 2016. The Iowa Office of the State Medical Examiner assisted the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office with the investigation.

Anyone with any information on the incident is asked to please contact the Fremont County Sheriff’s Office at 712-374-2424.

Succop’s 53-yard field goal gives Titans 19-17 win over KC

Sports

December 18th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – Ryan Succop kicked a 53-yard field goal into the wind as time expired Sunday to give the Tennessee Titans a 19-17 victory over the Kansas City Chiefs on a frigid afternoon at Arrowhead Stadium. Succop, who spent the first part of his career with Kansas City, came up short on his first try at the winner, but Chiefs coach Andy Reid had called a timeout just before the snap. Given a second chance, Succop knocked it through with a couple feet to spare as the Titans poured off the bench to celebrate.

The Titans’ rallied from a 17-7 hole, and Derrick Henry’s second touchdown got Tennessee (8-6) within 17-16 with just over three minutes left. But Titans coach Mike Mularkey went for the 2-point conversion and the lead. Marcus Mariota was pressured immediately and his pass never reached the end zone. But the Chiefs (10-4), trying to clinch a playoff spot, were unable to pick up enough first downs to run out the clock and Tennessee got the ball back with a minute left. With no timeouts, Mariota calmly found Rishard Matthews for 19 yards and Delanie Walker twice to set up Succop’s field-goal attempt.

The dramatic late-game turn came after Tennessee squandered plenty of chances early in the game. Matthews fumbled within sight of the goal line in the first half, ending the Titans’ streak of four straight games without a turnover. And Mariota, a Hawaii native, had plenty of trouble dealing with the cold weather, fumbling the ball away and throwing an interception to Ron Parker .

It was 1 degree at kickoff at Arrowhead Stadium, with a wind chill of minus-19, making it the coldest game in Kansas City since the franchise began keeping records in 1994. Still, the Chiefs got off to a hot start in the cold weather when Tyreek Hill faked like he was running an option play and took an inside handoff instead, running untouched 68 yards for a first-quarter touchdown.  It was the sixth touchdown for the dynamic rookie in the last four weeks.

Smith added his touchdown later in the half, and Cairo Santos knocked through a field goal, but the Chiefs blew a couple of opportunities. They were repelled twice at the 1-yard line and came away without any points, and Smith threw an interception in the end zone early in the second half. Succop hit from 39 yards early in the fourth quarter make it a one-possession game, and the Titans promptly got the ball back and marched the other way, twice converting on third down and once on fourth to set up Henry’s 1-yard TD plunge. The 2-point conversion attempt was a disaster, but it wound up being moot. The Titans’ defense and Succop’s strong right leg made sure of it.

Chiefs play Denver on Christmas night.

JANET FREEMAN, 83, of Elk Horn (Memorial Svcs. at a later date)

Obituaries

December 18th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

JANET FREEMAN, 83, of Elk Horn, died Saturday, Dec. 17th, at the Salem Lutheran Home in Elk Horn. Memorial services for JANET FREEMAN will be held at a later date. Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Avoca has the arrangements.

JANET FREEMAN is survived by:

Her husband – Larry Freeman, of Avoca.

Her daughter – Mary Jo (Peter) Hall, of Avoca.

Her sons – Michael (Jean) Junis, of Iowa City; Martin (Deborah) Junis, of McLean, IL., & Mitchell (Margie) Junis, of Bloomington, IL.

Her sister – Jane Egert, of Warrenville, IL.

Her brother – John (Bonnie) Engel, of Bettendorf.

10 grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren.

Lacking lawyers, Plains states try new rural staffing tacks

News

December 18th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The struggle to recruit attorneys to rural areas hasn’t let up despite several Plains states’ efforts. That’s particularly true in states such as Nebraska with vast stretches of sparsely populated land. But the state has launched a program that targets rural high schools students, hoping to persuade them to return to their rural roots to practice law.

The Rural Law Opportunities Program offers high-achieving high school students full-tuition undergraduate scholarships to three rural Nebraska colleges. Those who maintain a 3.5 GPA and get a minimum LSAT score are automatically accepted to the University of Nebraska College of Law. Program organizer Thomas Maul hopes the rate of return will be as high as the 60 percent reported by a similar program to get doctors into small towns.

The Latest: Subzero temps set records; warmer weather ahead

News, Weather

December 18th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

CHICAGO (AP) — The Latest on bitter cold weather in the Midwest. (all times local): 1:30 p.m….Record low temperatures have been recorded in cities across South Dakota, northwest Iowa and southwest Minnesota, while a blizzard shut down Interstate 90 in parts of Montana.

The National Weather Service in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, says the city of Huron set a new low for Sunday’s date in that location of minus 31 degrees. Another record fell in Marshall, Minnesota, where it was 31 below zero. Spencer, Iowa’s negative 27 degrees was a record-breaker there.

Extreme cold is forecast for the Great Lakes, Ohio Valley and New England. The weather service says the Gulf Coast region will have below normal temperatures for a few days. But a warming trend is expected to start early in the week in many spots as a quieter weather pattern begins with much less precipitation nationwide compared with recent days.

Dangerous cold in Nebraska, Iowa Sunday before warmer week

News, Weather

December 18th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Dangerous cold conditions are lingering across Iowa and Nebraska, but forecasters predict that warmer temperatures will arrive this week. The National Weather Service has issued wind chill warnings and advisories across most of both states Sunday because of the cold.

The subzero temperatures are combining with wind to create wind chills of 20-below to 40-below zero across the two states. So forecasters are encouraging people to stay inside or minimize any exposure to the cold. But some relief is in the forecast. Temperatures are expected to warm into the 20s and 30s beginning Monday.

3 from Hamburg arrested on drug charges Sunday morning

News

December 18th, 2016 by Ric Hanson

An investigation into the delivery of methamphetamine this (Sunday) morning in Hamburg, resulted in the arrest of three people. Sheriff Kevin Aistrope reports the investigation was handled by the Fremont County Sheriff’s Department K9 unit. Taken into custody for Conspiracy and Delivery of Meth, was 66-year old Elton Robert, 30-year old James Miller, and 27-year old Stuart Miller, all of Hamburg. All three men were being held in the Fremont County Jail on $50,000 cash bond, each, with additional charges pending.