Seismic Activity, Mummies, & Oddities
Investigative reporter Linda Moulton Howe shared reports on Yellowstone  seismic activity, Honey bee deaths, the invasion of Lionfish and its  effect on the marine eco-system, as well as Celtic looking mummies  buried in China. Regarding the swarm of small earthquakes felt around  Yellowstone in the last few weeks, Linda interviewed Jacob Lowenstern  who is a vulcanologist in charge of monitoring the volcanic activity in  and around the area. He said that, while this increase in seismic  activity may sound worrisome, it is actually a good sign because they  help to relieve the pressure that has been increasing beneath the  caldera. More here.
Providing an update on the ongoing crisis  surrounding mysterious bee deaths, Linda played an interview with Jerry  Hayes of the Florida Department of Agriculture. Hayes detailed how the  California almond industry has been particularly hard hit by the  decreasing bee population, as farmers are now paying nearly double the  price when importing bees to pollinate their crops. Meanwhile,  beekeepers faced with crippling losses are beginning to leave the  profession. "If you are a small business person and you lose 30% of your  business every year, that's not a good business model," Hayes mused.  View the full Earthfiles report.
On the other end of the  spectrum, Linda reported on the epidemic of Lionfish invading the waters  of Florida, Bermuda, and the Bahamas. The voracious fish eats anything  it can swallow and lays an astonishing 30,000 eggs every 4 to 7 days.  She shared an interview with Lad Atkin, special projects director of the  Reef Environmental Education Foundation. Atkin noted that the Lionfish  is no small concern for the island communities, since it is not just  feasting on a few types of fish but a vast selection of "ecologically,  economically and recreationally important marine species." More info.
In  her final report of the evening, Linda discussed Caucasian mummies  found in China which will be exhibited at the Bowers Museum in Santa  Ana, California later this year. She spoke with Victor Mair, a professor  of Chinese Literature and Language, who stumbled upon the mummies  inside of a museum in China and originally believed they were a hoax.  What makes the mummies particularly mysterious is that they are fair  skinned, fair haired, and, in some cases, are found adorned in plaids  and tartans, leading to the misconception that they are Celtic. Mair  explained that DNA testing has shown the ancestry of the mummies is from  Europe on the male side and China on the female side. More on the  story, including images of the mummies, can be found at Earthfiles.com. 
Biography:
Linda  Moulton Howe is a graduate of Stanford University with a Masters Degree  in Communication. She has devoted her documentary film, television,  radio, writing and reporting career to productions concerning science,  medicine and the environment. Ms. Howe has received local, national and  international awards, including three regional Emmys, a national Emmy  nomination and a Station Peabody award for medical programming. Linda's  documentaries have included A Strange Harvest and Strange Harvests 1993,  which explored the worldwide animal mutilation mystery. Another film, A  Prairie Dawn, focused on astronaut training in Denver. She has also  produced documentaries in Ethiopia and Mexico for UNICEF about child  survival efforts and for Turner Broadcasting in Atlanta about  environmental challenges.
In addition to television, Linda  produces, reports and edits the award-winning science, environment and  earth mysteries news website, Earthfiles.com. In 2003, Earthfiles  received an Award for Standard of Excellence presented by the Internet's  WebAward Association. Earthfiles also received the 2001 Encyclopaedia  Britannica Award for Journalistic Excellence. Linda also reports  science, environment and earth mysteries news for Clear Channel's  Premiere Radio Networks and Unknowncountry.com. In 2005, she traveled to  Amsterdam, Hawaii, and several other U. S. conferences to speak about  her investigative journalism.
In 2004, Linda was on-camera TV  reporter for The History Channel's documentary investigation of an  unusual August 2004 cow death in Farnam, Nebraska. In November 2009,  Linda was videotaped in Roswell, New Mexico, to provide document  research background for a 1940s American policy of denial in the  interest of national security about spacecraft and non-human body  retrievals for a 2010 History Channel TV series, Ancient Aliens.
In  2010, Linda was honored with the 2010 Courage In Journalism Award at  the National Press Club in Washington, D. C., by the Paradigm Research  Group's X Conference. She has traveled in Venezuela, Peru, Brazil,  England, Norway, France, Switzerland, The Netherlands, Yugoslavia,  Turkey, Ethiopia, Kenya, Egypt, Australia, Japan, Canada, Mexico, the  Yucatan and Puerto Rico for research and productions.
 
 


 
