Moline standout 6 teens arrested after chase in stolen car A7 Gomez is Special Counsel Mueller close to a ‘we’ runner B1 rendering judgment on Russian probe A10 141ST YEAR · MOLINE, ILLINOIS Thursday, October 18, 2018 | QCOnline.com | $1.50 168TH YEAR Tornadoes spinning up farther east Illinois, Iowa among states with increased activity SETH BORENSTEIN Associated Press WASHINGTON — Over the past few decades tornadoes have been shifting — decreasing in Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas but spinning up more in states along the Mississippi River and farther east, a new study shows. Scientists aren’t quite cer- tain why. Tornado activity is increasing most in Mississippi, Arkansas, Tennessee, Louisiana, Alabama, Kentucky, Missouri, Illinois, In- diana, Wisconsin, Iowa and parts of Ohio and Michigan, according to a study in Wednesday’s journal JESSICA GALLAGHER /
[email protected] Climate and Atmospheric Science. There has been a slight decrease in Rose Johnson, a keeper at Niabi Zoo, shows the live traps set up close to the exhibit that two badgers escaped from on Oct 4. Zoo officials believe the Great Plains, with the biggest the badgers are still in the vicinity of the Coal Valley zoo. drop in central and eastern Texas. Even with the decline, Texas still gets the most tornadoes of any state. The shift could be deadly because the area with increasing tornado ac- tivity is bigger and home to more Niabi Zoo setting traps people, said study lead author Vic- tor Gensini, a professor of atmo- of their habitat in the biodiver- gers’ favorite meal — dead mice previously wasn’t. He said the spheric sciences at Northern Illi- Missing badgers sity building Oct.