JANISCH Amy C <br />From: Cindy Allen <cindyallen2l@yahoo.com> <br />Sent: Tuesday, September 23, 2014 12:28 PM <br />To: TAYLOR Becky G <br />Subject: Fw: Fw: Save: Cracking Mystery Reveals How Electronics Affect Bird Migration <br />Follow Up Flag: Follow up <br />Flag Status: Flagged <br />On Monday, September 22, 2014 12:28 PM, "jkatra@spamarrest.com" <jkatra@spamarrest.com> wrote: <br />Thanks for sending! This info should clinch the issue of <br />preventing a cell tower from being erected across the street from <br />the West Amazon Environmental Corridor. <br />Please send this to Becky Taylor! <br />Light, <br />Jane <br />On Sat Sep 20 10:36:38 CDT 2014, Cindy Allen <br /><cindyallen21 yahoo.com> wrote: <br />> On Saturday, September 13, 2014 7:28 PM, Kathy Ging <br />> <kathy(a)-kathyging.com> wrote: <br />> excerpt: _Though they could hardly believe it themselves, the <br />> scientists had their answer. <br />> Low-level, broadband electromagnetic noise _the kind that urban <br />> areas are now awash in_ can disable a critical tool migratory <br />> songbirds use in finding their way between seasonal destinations. <br />> This finding that urban areas can handicap navigation may help <br />> explain the disturbing decline in migratory songbird populations <br />> <http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2013/07/songbird-migration/franzen-text>, <br />> Mouritsen says. It also provides the first ever, <br />> scientifically sound evidence of weak, anthropogenic <br />> electromagnetic fields affecting a biological process._ <br />> Earlier this year [May] scientists at the University of Oldenburg <br />> had published in the journal Nature an article on their work <br />> demonstrating adverse effects of very low level EMF on the <br />> ability of European Robins to orient to earth?s magnetic fields. <br />> Listed below in order, are links and articles on this: <br />