Answered, Mystery Rain Bird's 5000 Wreck


Just before the turn of the year 2011 a strange incident happened in the sky Beebe, Arkansas, United States. Like the rain, about 5,000 dead birds fall from the top black.

This unusual phenomenon controversy, emerging theories that explain it. There would have thought, that's because the gas that seeps from the New Madrid fault, sonic bombs, the origin of the plant in Mississippi, a tornado, part of a secret government project, or even jobs alias alien aliens.

The correct answer is: fireworks. As reported in USA Today site, bird experts from the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission, said Karen Rowe, suspected there was someone who lit a large fireworks.

Sparks was Scarecrow who later suffered disorientation, accelerate the rate of flying up to speeds 25 miles per hour. The birds were then crashed into the houses, warning boards, and even crash land.

"They're bouncing into homes, basketball board, trucks," he said, as published in USA Today, Thursday, January 6, 2011.

Based on the study of necropsies on dead birds, Rowe and his team believe they suspected that the birds were killed by fireworks, right.

"Someone fired a 10 to 20 professional type fireworks near the scene of the birds were perched," said Rowe.

He added the police chief Beebe, Wayne Ballew reported that while the incident he admitted shaking his window.

Rowe also meet a number of residents living near the site of the discovery of the carcasses of birds. They said she heard a sound like a bomb.

Fireworks exploded near the hundreds of thousands flock of red winged blackbirds and European starlings are known to often roost together.

"Unfortunately, the two birds that have poor visibility when dark," said poultry researcher at the University of California-Davis, Robert Meese.

Based on the results of necropsies study found no bird chest trauma, bleeding in the chest, and the edge of a broken bird wings.

Bird deaths also were reported this week in Louisiana, 450 tail, and in Kentucky last week totaling more than 100 individuals.