February 9, 2012

Wisconsin researchers studying meteorite that crossed Iowa sky

Researchers in Wisconsin are studying what they believe is a small portion of the meteor some Iowans saw streaking across the sky Wednesday night. A camera mounted on the dashboard of a Howard County Sheriff’s Department squad car captured the fireball as it crossed the Midwestern sky.

Some northern Iowans say they heard a sonic boom, too. Meteorite hunters descended on southwestern Wisconsin, where the meteor landed. Officials in the Geoscience Department at the University of Wisconsin in Madison have asked people who find fragments to bring them in as soon as possible and professor John Valley says their plea already has yielded results.

“We’ve been studying a sample here at UW-Madison that was brought in by a landowner west of Madison,” Valley says. Valley has worked in the university’s geoscience department for 28 years, but this is the first time he’s seen part of a meteorite. “The piece we have is very small, about the size of a peanut and there might be smaller pieces or bigger pieces,” he says.

Experts like Valley believe the meteor people saw streaking through the sky this past Wednesday night is part of a meteor shower called the Gamma Virginids that will last through April 21st. It may be difficult to find parts of the meteor which fell in southwest Wisconsin, as they may look like rocks. But Valley suggests the meteorites may stand out because of their color, as the fragment that has been turned into his department is black.

“It is on the outside a dull-black, matte black finish which is the fusion crust from where it became very hot falling through the atmosphere,” Valley says. There are crystals on the inside, according to Valley.

“Crystals that can be as large as a pea that are snow-white in a matrix that is grey, so it has a speckled, conglomerate appearance on the inside,” Valley says, “but this very distinctive, flat black outside coating.”

The National Weather Service estimated the meteor was about 30-feet wide when it blazed the fiery trail across Wednesday night’s sky. People from as far away as Missouri and Indiana reported seeing the fireball in the sky.

Contributed by Chandra Lynn, WIBA, Milwaukee

Goldstar Museum curator hopes to have new exhibits ready in a year

A Cobra helicopter was lifted to the roof of the Gold Star Military Museum at Camp Dodge this past week as the work continues to fill the new exhibit area. Museum curator Mike Vogt says one of the most common questions he gets is when they are going to have everything completed.

He says they think if everything goes well it could be completed in a year. The Cobra helicopter from an Iowa National Guard unit in Waterloo is one of the large exhibit pieces, and another is under construction in California.

Vogt says it’s a full-sized scale replica of a Curtis P-40-B Tomahawk fighter plane that will be painted in the colors of an American volunteer group. The plane will represent one flow by Bill Reed of Marion for the Flying Tigers. Other exhibits include a periscope from a cold-war era sub, tanks and other heavy equipment. Vogt says it’s taken some planning to bring things together.

“Managing the project has been an exercise in a three-dimensinal timeline chess game, where we can only place one object, or one exhibit in place before another,” Vogt says. Vogt says they are still taking donations to help fund the exhibits.

He says the overall budget for the exhibits is about two million dollars and anyone can make a donation. To find out how to donate, visit the Iowa National Guard website at:www.iowanationalguard.com, and click on the Goldstar link.

Morel mushrooms popping earlier than normal this year

Morels found by John Waite on April 13 near Mt. Vernon.

Morels found by John Waite on April 13 near Mt. Vernon.

One of the sure signs of spring is beginning to pop up in Iowa – the morel mushroom. This year, mushroom hunters like John Waite of Anamosa are finding morels earlier than usual.

“This is the earliest I’ve ever found morels,” Waite said. “I’ve found just a handful of small ones so far, but my prior earliest was April 17th and that was six or seven years ago.”  Typically, the morel mushroom season begins in late April or early May.

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Iowa financial advisor says economy is rebounding

An Iowa financial advisor is looking back on a sterling week for Wall Street, with massive gains in the Dow Jones industrial average, for starters, topping off at its best levels in a year-and-a-half. Jim Tausz, of Clarion, says the economy is clearly rebounding.

Tausz says it was just announced we have no inflation and there’s no inflation even on the horizon while interest rates, after a brief increase last week, fell to new lows. He predicts better times are head for the marketplace.

Ten-year treasury bonds have fallen, which means everyone who has a mortgage or uses a credit card to see lower rates, while the Dow Jones has risen above 11,000, its first time at that level in 18 months. Tausz is predicting the upward trend will continue but he recommends wise Iowa investors plan for anything.

He says, “You need to be in a position where you can invest in things that, if we do have a little inflation that starts rearing its ugly head, or you start seeing interest rates rise a little bit, you’re in investments that will react to that in a positive way.” Some more solid investments Tausz recommends are in commodities, like gold, silver and copper.

By Pat Powers, KQWC, Webster City