LAKEPORT, Calif. – An open house this week will look at the city of Lakeport’s retail trade area and how local businesses can make use of a new study to expand and succeed.
The city of Lakeport, in partnership with The Retail Coach, will host the open house from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 11, and Thursday, Sept. 12, at Lakeport City Hall, 225 Park St.
In July, the city hired The Retail Coach to assist with recruiting more retail businesses to Lakeport and strengthening existing businesses, as Lake County News has reported.
The city and the firm recently conducted an assessment of Lakeport’s retail trade area and want to share the results with local businesses.
One of the findings was that Lakeport – which has about 4,700 residents – has a daytime population that balloons to an estimated 57,000 because of visitors, tourists, students and shoppers.
The focus of this week’s open house will be to help local businesses better understand the local retail market, identify new opportunities, gain more customers, understand gaps in the market, create a plan and discuss current trends, city officials said.
All local businesses are invited to stop by and check out the resources available to them.
For more information contact the city of Lakeport at 707-263-5615, extension 204.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
A seaplane was damaged in a crash on Clear Lake in Lakeport, Calif., on Saturday, September 7, 2019. Photo by Dan Labelle. LAKEPORT, Calif. – A pilot and his wife suffered minor injuries on Saturday afternoon when their seaplane crashed into Clear Lake while taking off.
The 40th annual Clear Lake Seaplane Splash In took place on Saturday, headquartered at the former Natural High School property on North Main Street.
Just as the event was ending at around 4 p.m., a water rescue involving a seaplane was dispatched off of Willopoint near Library Park.
Lakeport Fire Chief Rick Bergem said the pilot was taking off in his two-seater seaplane with his wife as his passenger.
As the plane was banking into a left-hand turn, it may have gotten caught in the wind, which pushed it into the water, Bergem said.
Bergem said the plane remained on the water’s surface and didn’t sink.
Similarly, witnesses at the scene reported that the plane cartwheeled after hitting a crosswind.
Dan Labelle, who was at the event and helping with another plane when the crash took place, said the plane landed on its pontoons and that boats immediately headed out to it and towed it in.
Bergem said the husband and wife, whose names were not released, suffered minor injuries. The woman wanted to go to the hospital to be checked out and her husband, who denied medical care, went with her.
They were “very lucky,” said Bergem.
The plane appeared to have suffered the most damage, with its wings crumpled and the rear section of the fuselage almost snapped off.
At the September 2016 Splash In a Grumman Widgeon plane crashed offshore of the city of Lakeport while the pilot was attempting a water landing. In that crash, the pilot had left down the landing gear, which caught the water, causing the plane to pitch forward onto its nose and sink into the lake.
In that crash, the pilot had minor injuries and his passenger suffered a broken leg.
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KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – Firefighters are continuing to work to fully contain a wildland fire that began burning in the Kelseyville area on Saturday afternoon.
Cal Fire said in a Saturday evening report that the Oak fire has burned 53 acres and is 50-percent contained.
Multiple structures remain threatened, with one destroyed, Cal Fire reported.
The fire started at about 2 p.m. Saturday in the area of Live Oak Drive and Highway 29.
It prompted evacuations in the area of Live Oak Drive from the Gross Cutoff to Cruickshank Road, Cruickshank Road from Live Oak Drive to Highway 29, and Highway 29 from Cole Creek Road to Cruickshank Road.
The evacuation order for that area had been reduced to a warning on Saturday afternoon. Officials said no evacuation center has been opened.
Highway 29 remained closed from Live Oak Drive to Bottle Rock Road, with Live Oak Drive open to residents only, Cal Fire said Saturday evening.
Officials later opened Highway 29 shortly after 10:15 p.m.
The cause of the fire is so far unknown, Cal Fire said.
Cal Fire said that suppression efforts are continuing on the fire, which is burning in grass, brush and oak woodland.
Throughout the afternoon and evening Cal Fire and local fire agencies worked to get the fire under control while dealing with a west wind that helped the fire spot over the highway.
A large force of air tankers and helicopters were used on the fire, with some of them later diverted to work on other incidents around the state, including the Swedes fire near Oroville, based on radio traffic.
Resources assigned on Saturday evening include 17 engines, six air tankers, four water tenders, three helicopters, two hand crews, three dozers and 128 personnel, according to Cal Fire’s report.
Cooperating agencies include Cal Fire, Kelseyville Fire Protection District, South Lake Fire Protection District, Lakeport Fire District, Lake County Fire Protection District, Northshore Fire Protection District, UC Davis Fire Department, Willow Oak Fire Department, Williams Fire Department, the Lake County Sheriff’s Office, California Highway Patrol and Pacific Gas and Electric.
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NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – Work is continuing to contain a fire in the Mendocino National Forest and also to stop fires in other parts of the state.
The Henthorne fire, which began Thursday 15 miles northeast of Covelo, remained at 15 percent contained Sunday evening.
It is burning in the Yolla Bolly Wilderness on the Mendocino National Forest.
Mendocino National Forest officials said the size of the fire was adjusted down from 380 to 237 acres after crews completed a precise assessment of the perimeter.
The Henthorne fire is a US Forest Service incident that is being managed under unified command by the Mendocino National Forest and Cal Fire.
Officials said the fire has stopped spreading and is mostly creeping and smoldering.
There are 475 resources assigned to the incident including 38 engines, nine crews, two helicopters, two dozers and eight water tenders, according to the Sunday report.
Crews are focused on reinforcing firelines and extinguishing burning vegetation near the containment lines, forest officials said.
The Sunday report said personnel on the incident expect cooler conditions this week with the temperature in the 60s and light wind.
Elsewhere around California, Cal Fire reported the following fire updates:
– Red Bank fire: 8,838 acres, 50-percent contained, two structures destroyed. The Red Bank fire began Thursday west of Red Bluff in Tehama County. There are 2,307 firefighters assigned. Cause: Lightning.
– Taboose fire: 4,000 acres, 10-percent contained. The Taboose fire began Friday northwest of Aberdeen in Inyo County. Cause: Under investigation.
– Tenaja fire: 1,926 acres, 73-percent contained. The Tenaja fire began Wednesday in La Cresta in Riverside County. There are 392 personnel assigned. Cause: Under investigation.
– Swedes fire: 400 acres, 30-percent contained, two structures destroyed. The Swedes fire began Saturday east of Oroville in Butte County. There are 517 personnel assigned. Cause: Under investigation.
– Forbestown fire: 58 acres, 85-percent contained. The Forbestown fire began Friday east of Oroville in Butte County. There are 105 personnel assigned. Cause: Under investigation.
– Duzel fire: 15 acres, 50-percent contained. The Duzel fire began Saturday northeast of Etna in Siskiyou County. Cause: Under investigation.
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The Henthorne fire in the Yolla Bolly Wilderness on the Mendocino National Forest in Northern California. Courtesy photo. NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – Firefighters are raising containment on fires around Northern California, including the Henthorne fire in the Yolla Bolly Wilderness on the Mendocino National Forest.
The fire, first reported on Thursday morning, is located 15 miles northeast of Covelo in Trinity County. It is under the unified command of the Mendocino National Forest and Cal Fire.
Officials said that on Saturday the containment on the 380-acre fire bumped up to 15 percent.
The fire has torched and spotted through heavy, dead and downed timber and brush, forest officials reported.
On Saturday, there were 532 resources on the incident including 13 crews, 39 engines, four helicopters, five dozers and eight water tenders, officials said.
The Saturday fire report said crews are working on very steep, rugged terrain and dealing with numerous dead standing trees or snags in the fire area.
The firefighting effort is expected to be impacted by a weekend cooling trend, which includes breezy southerly winds and temperatures in the low 70s.
Elsewhere around the region, in Lake County the Oak fire, which began near Kelseyville on Saturday, was at 53 acres and 50-percent containment, with one structure destroyed, as of Saturday night, as Lake County News has reported.
The region’s largest fire is the Red Bank near Red Bluff. It has burned 8,838 acres and is 15-percent contained.
In Butte County near Oroville, the Swedes fire is 400 acres with no containment and the 58-acre Forbestown fire is 80-percent contained, Cal Fire reported.
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The Henthorne fire in the Yolla Bolly Wilderness on the Mendocino National Forest in Northern California. Courtesy photo.
The Oak fire burning near Kelseyville, Calif., on Saturday, September 7, 2019. The fire is shown here at 2:50 p.m. Photo by Maile Field.
This story is being updated on a rolling basis.
KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – Firefighters are trying to stop a vegetation fire in the Kelseyville area that has closed Highway 29 and led to a call for nearby evacuations.
The Oak incident was dispatched shortly before 2 p.m. Saturday in the 6800 block of Live Oak Drive near Cole Creek Road.
The large and expanding smoke column can be seen across Clear Lake.
First units on scene, which arrived within 10 minutes of dispatch, said the fire was five acres with a moderate rate of spread.
A short time later, Cal Fire air attack reported that the fire was 10 acres, with one structure completely involved and the fire moving toward other structures.
The fire’s building smoke is raising concerns for air support, as is the presence of seaplanes for the annual Clear Lake Seaplane Splash In in Lakeport.
By 2:30 p.m. the fire was reported to be 10 acres and moving toward Highway 29, which led to authorities closing the southbound lane of Highway 29 from Live Oak south through the fire area.
At 2:40 p.m., incident command reported there was a spot fire that had jumped Highway 29 and had burned a quarter-acre of vegetation on the east side of the highway. At that point, most of the fire remained on the highway’s west side.
Air attack reported that the fire was moving toward homes on a nearby ridge and that structure protection in the area was a priority, according to radio reports.
Incident command asked for two more air tankers and two more helicopters, adding to four tankers and three copters that previously had been requested, based on reports from the scene.
By 2:46 p.m., the fire was estimated to be between 15 and 20 acres, with a call out issued for three more engines from local fire agencies.
At 2:48 p.m., incident command directed evacuations begin taking place in the area of Live Oak and Cruickshank, with law enforcement called in to assist.
The California Highway Patrol reported that a hard road closure was instituted at Bottle Rock Road and Cole Creek Road just after 3 p.m.
At 3:28 p.m., the Lake County Sheriff’s Office issued notice of an evacuation order for the areas of Live Oak Drive between Gross Cutoff and Cruickshank, Highway between Cole Creek and Cruickshank, and Cruickshank between Live Oak and Highway 29. Residents are ordered to leave the area immediately.
The sheriff’s office followed up at 3:40 p.m. by issuing an evacuation warning for residents of the area east of Highway 29 between Cole Creek Road and Highway 175. Authorities urged those residents with nonambulatory family or animals to consider immediately leaving the area.
At 4:15 p.m., incident command reported that firefighters were making good progress, with a combination of hose lay and dozer line around a majority of the incident and Copter 104 from Boggs Helitack working one spot fire outside of the fire line.
At that time, incident command estimated that the fire remained at 20 acres with containment at 10 percent, and no additional resource orders expected.
On Saturday afternoon requests also were being made of incident command to begin releasing some air resources due to fires in other parts of the state, based on radio reports.
At 4:57 p.m., the sheriff's office said the evacuation order for the areas of Live Oak Drive between Gross Cutoff adn Cruickshank, Highway 29 between Cole Creek and Cruickshank, and Cruickshank between Live Oak and Highway 29 had been downgraded to an evacuation warning.
The California Highway Patrol reported shortly before 6:15 p.m. that the portion of Highway 29 in the fire area – between Live Oak Drive and Bottle Rock Road – is to remain closed for several more hours and possibly into the night.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKEPORT, Calif. – The Lakeport Economic Development Advisory Committee will meet this week to discuss retail development and city updates.
The committee, or LEDAC, will meet from 7:30 to 9 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 11, at Lakeport City Hall, 225 Park St.
The meeting is open to the public.
This quarterly LEDAC meeting will include updates on city projects and activities, discussion of a retail development strategy, and ongoing consideration of the Lakeport Economic Development Strategic Plan 2017-2022, which includes business walks and ordinance revisions to strengthen the downtown area and Lakeport as a whole.
LEDAC advocates for a strong and positive Lakeport business community and acts as a conduit between the city and the community for communicating the goals, activities and progress of Lakeport’s economic and business programs.
Members are Chair Wilda Shock and Vice Chair Denise Combs, Secretary Terre Logsdon, Candy De Los Santos, Bill Eaton, Melissa Fulton, Pam Harpster, Judith Kanavle, Andy Lucas, Dan Peterson and Panette Talia. City staff who are members include City Manager Margaret Silveira and Community Development Director Kevin Ingram.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. – Lake County Animal Care and Control is looking for homes for several dogs, including one that’s waited for months.
Dogs available for adoption this week include mixes of Cane Corso mastiff, Catahoula Leopard Dog, Chihuahua, Labrador Retriever, pit bull and wirehaired terrier.
Dogs that are adopted from Lake County Animal Care and Control are either neutered or spayed, microchipped and, if old enough, given a rabies shot and county license before being released to their new owner. License fees do not apply to residents of the cities of Lakeport or Clearlake.
If you're looking for a new companion, visit the shelter. There are many great pets hoping you'll choose them.
The following dogs at the Lake County Animal Care and Control shelter have been cleared for adoption (additional dogs on the animal control Web site not listed are still “on hold”).
“Cash” is a male pit bull terrier mix in kennel No. 27, ID No. 12413. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Cash’
“Cash” is a male pit bull terrier mix with a short black and white coat.
He needs a home as soon as possible – he has been marked as “urgent” because he has been at the shelter since June.
Shelter staff said Cash does well with others, loves people and walks well on a leash.
He has been neutered.
He’s in kennel No. 27, ID No. 12413.
This female Chihuahua-terrier mix is in kennel No. 4, ID No. 12885. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. Female Chihuahua-terrier mix
This female Chihuahua-terrier mix has a short tan and white coat.
She is in kennel No. 4, ID No. 12885.
“Nova” is a female Cane Corso mastiff in kennel No. 17, ID No. 6579. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Nova’
“Nova” is a female Cane Corso mastiff with a short black coat.
She is in kennel No. 17, ID No. 6579.
“Koda” is a male pit bull terrier in kennel No. 18, ID No. 12609. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Koda’
“Koda” is a male pit bull terrier with a short red coat.
He already has been neutered.
He’s in kennel No. 18, ID No. 12609.
This female Labrador Retriever is in kennel No. 23, ID No. 12697. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. Female Labrador Retriever
This female Labrador Retriever has a short black.
She is in kennel No. 23, ID No. 12697.
“Beau” is a male Catahoula Leopard Dog in kennel No. 24, ID No. 12677. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. ‘Beau’
“Beau” is a male Catahoula Leopard Dog with a blue merle coat.
He’s in kennel No. 24, ID No. 12677.
This female wirehaired terrier is in kennel No. 31, ID No. 12771. Photo courtesy of Lake County Animal Care and Control. Female wirehaired terrier
This female wirehaired terrier has a coarse brown and black coat.
She is in kennel No. 31, ID No. 12771.
Lake County Animal Care and Control is located at 4949 Helbush in Lakeport, next to the Hill Road Correctional Facility.
Office hours are Monday through Friday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., Saturday. The shelter is open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday and on Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
For more information call Lake County Animal Care and Control at 707-263-0278.
Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
The acorns of the interior Live Oak sit deep inside their caps and can take up to two years to mature. Once the acorn has matured and fallen from the tree it is only viable for that single growing season. Many animals depend on acorns in seasons when other food sources are unavailable, such as Scrub Jays, Acorn Woodpeckers, deer and even bears. Photo by Mary K. Hanson. NORTHERN CALIFORNIA – We have a lot of different oak trees in the region, but for today let’s focus on one that has some pretty unique and interesting features, namely the interior live oak, Quercus wislizeni.
These trees can grow in a tall tree formation reaching heights of between 30 and 70 feet high or they can also grow in a low, scrubby shrub formation (between 6 and 20 feet tall) depending on their habitat. But unlike some of their oak cousins, the interior live oaks have relatively thin bark, so they don’t do as well in high-fire areas as, say, the Blue Oaks (Quercus douglasii).
They can, however, grow in some places where other oaks can’t, including areas where the soil is comprised of igneous rock (rocks made of molten material) or even granite. Part of the reason for that is that the interiors have the ability to dig down deep into the ground to find sources of water other oak trees may miss.
In fact, studies indicate that they have the deepest root structures of all oak trees across the globe. In Placer County the roots of one tree were traced down through over 24 feet of rock before they touched ground water!
The leaves of interior live oaks are pretty interesting, too. They are generally flat, thick (sclerophyllous) and evergreen. These thick leaves help the trees to retain moisture in the hot summer months.
Another interesting fact about the Interior live oaks is that they actually sport two different leaf shapes on the same tree. New leaves re-sprouting from a root ball or growing on the lower branches of an established tree have a serrated edge and look almost like holly leaves. The more mature leaves further up into the crown of the tree have smooth edges. It’s believed that the serrated version of the leaves was an adaptation by the tree to try to discourage deer from eating the younger, more tender leaves.
Over 70 percent of insect galls form on oak trees. If you look carefully on the leaves of interior live oaks, you can see that they build specialized galls to feed and protect the larvae of different cynipid wasps, like this tiny Kernel Gall created by the tree for the wasp Callirhytis serricornis on the underside of its leaves. Photo by Mary K. Hanson. Deer can really decimate young interior live oaks by their foraging, which is why in some reserves and refuges where there’s restoration work going on, you see the younger trees surrounded by chicken wire or some other defensive barrier. That’s to protect the young trees from being browsed to death before they can reach a height where they’re no longer so badly impacted by foraging animals.
Once established, the Interiors can live for about 200 years. Because they have the ability to re-sprout from the root stock after a wildfire, however, it’s believed that many of the trees we see actually have root systems that are much older (by several generations) than the above-ground trees themselves.
Interior live oaks are home to a variety of nesting birds and squirrels and are host trees to several different kinds of butterflies, like the California Sister. If you look carefully on the leaves of these oaks, you can also see that they build specialized galls to feed and protect the larvae of several different cynipid wasps.
Some of galls you should be able to find right now are the tiny two-horned galls, pumpkin galls, and kernel galls (which look like little green jugs with a reddish-brown lid on them). The kernel galls form on the underside of the leaves along the mid-vein.
The interior live oak is a tree you probably see almost every day in our area, but it has some incredible adaptations and features that make it truly unique. And where both the interior live oak and the coast live oak (Quercus agrifolia) are native to California, it’s our interior live oak that is actually endemic to our state, found here and nowhere else on earth.
Mary K. Hanson is a Certified California Naturalist, author and nature photographer, living with terminal cancer. She developed and helps to teach the naturalist program at Tuleyome, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit conservation organization based in Woodland. For more information, see their website at http://tuleyome.org/.
Interior live oak trees can sport two kinds of leaves at the same time, one with a serrated edge and one with a smooth edge. It’s believed that the serrated version of the leaves was an adaptation by the tree to try to discourage deer from eating the younger, more tender leaves before they mature. Photo by Mary K. Hanson.
KELSEYVILLE, Calif. – After continuing their work overnight in cool conditions, firefighters have fully contained the Oak fire near Kelseyville.
The fire began at around 2 p.m. Saturday in the area of Live Oak Drive and Highway 29 in Kelseyville.
Cal Fire said early Sunday that firefighters kept the blaze to a total of 53 acres.
One structure was destroyed and several others were saved by firefighters who fought to protect them. Cal Fire said there were no injuries to firefighters or civilians.
Cal Fire’s final report on the fire said it and cooperating agencies made significant progress overnight by completing containment lines around the fire.
Smoke may be visible Sunday from smoldering heavy fuels well within the containment lines, Cal Fire said.
Fire personnel will be extinguishing those areas on Sunday and will be checking the fire area over the next several days, according to the report.
Evacuations in the area remain as an advisory, Cal Fire said.
The Highway 29 closure in the fire area was lifted on Saturday night, and Cal Fire asked motorists to use caution when driving in the fire area as equipment and personnel may be present.
Resources that remain assigned on Sunday include 74 personnel, 10 engines, three water tenders and two hand crews, Cal Fire reported.
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Vahe Peroomian, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
With giant Saturn hanging in the blackness and sheltering Cassini from the Sun’s blinding glare, the spacecraft viewed the rings as never before. NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute
Many dream of what they would do had they a time machine. Some would travel 100 million years back in time, when dinosaurs roamed the Earth. Not many, though, would think of taking a telescope with them, and if, having done so, observe Saturn and its rings.
Whether our time-traveling astronomer would be able to observe Saturn’s rings is debatable. Have the rings, in some shape or form, existed since the beginnings of the solar system, 4.6 billion years ago, or are they a more recent addition? Had the rings even formed when the Chicxulub asteroid wiped out the dinosaurs?
I am a space scientist with a passion for teaching physics and astronomy, and Saturn’s rings have always fascinated me as they tell the story of how the eyes of humanity were opened to the wonders of our solar system and the cosmos.
Our view of Saturn evolves
When Galileo first observed Saturn through his telescope in 1610, he was still basking in the fame of discovering the four moons of Jupiter. But Saturn perplexed him. Peering at the planet through his telescope, it first looked to him as a planet with two very large moons, then as a lone planet, and then again through his newer telescope, in 1616, as a planet with arms or handles.
Four decades later, Christiaan Huygens first suggested that Saturn was a ringed planet, and what Galileo had seen were different views of Saturn’s rings. Because of the 27 degrees in the tilt of Saturn’s rotation axis relative to the plane of its orbit, the rings appear to tilt toward and away from Earth with the 29-year cycle of Saturn’s revolution about the Sun, giving humanity an ever-changing view of the rings.
But what were the rings made of? Were they solid disks as some suggested? Or were they made up of smaller particles? As more structure became apparent in the rings, as more gaps were found, and as the motion of the rings about Saturn was observed, astronomers realized that the rings were not solid, and were perhaps made up of a large number of moonlets, or small moons. At the same time, estimates for the thickness of the rings went from Sir William Herschel’s 300 miles in 1789, to Audouin Dollfus’ much more precise estimate of less than two miles in 1966.
Astronomers understanding of the rings changed dramatically with the Pioneer 11 and twin Voyager missions to Saturn. Voyager’s now famous photograph of the rings, backlit by the Sun, showed for the first time that what appeared as the vast A, B and C rings in fact comprised millions of smaller ringlets.
Voyager 2 false color image of Saturn’s B and C rings showing many ringlets.NASA
The Cassini mission to Saturn, having spent over a decade orbiting the ringed giant, gave planetary scientists even more spectacular and surprising views. The magnificent ring system of Saturn is between 10 meters and one kilometer thick. The combined mass of its particles, which are 99.8% ice and most of which are less than one meter in size, is about 16 quadrillion tons, less than 0.02% the mass of Earth’s Moon, and less than half the mass of Saturn’s moon Mimas. This has led some scientists to speculate whether the rings are a result of the breakup of one of Saturn’s moons or the capture and breakup of a stray comet.
The dynamic rings
In the four centuries since the invention of the telescope, rings have also been discovered around Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune, the giant planets of our solar system. The reason why the giant planets are adorned with rings and Earth and the other rocky planets are not was first proposed by Eduard Roche, a French astronomer in 1849.
A moon and its planet are always in a gravitational dance. Earth’s moon, by pulling on opposite sides of the Earth, causes the ocean tides. Tidal forces also affect planetary moons. If a moon ventures too close to a planet, these forces can overcome the gravitational “glue” holding the moon together and tear it apart. This causes the moon to break up and spread along its original orbit, forming a ring.
The Roche limit, the minimum safe distance for a moon’s orbit, is approximately 2.5 times the planet’s radius from the planet’s center. For enormous Saturn, this is a distance of 87,000 kilometers above its cloud tops and matches the location of Saturn’s outer F ring. For Earth, this distance is less than 10,000 kilometers above its surface. An asteroid or comet would have to venture very close to the Earth to be torn apart by tidal forces and form a ring around the Earth. Our own Moon is a very safe 380,000 kilometers away.
NASA’s Cassini spacecraft about to make one of its dives between Saturn and its innermost rings as part of the mission’s grand finale.NASA/JPL-Caltech
The thinness of planetary rings is caused by their ever-changing nature. A ring particle whose orbit is tilted with respect to the rest of the ring will eventually collide with other ring particles. In doing so, it will lose energy and settle into the plane of the ring. Over millions of years, all such errant particles either fall away or get in line, leaving only the very thin ring system people observe today.
During the last year of its mission, the Cassini spacecraft dived repeatedly through the 7,000 kilometer gap between the clouds of Saturn and its inner rings. These unprecedented observations made one fact very clear: The rings are constantly changing. Individual particles in the rings are continually jostled by each other. Ring particles are steadily raining down onto Saturn.
The shepherd moons Pan, Daphnis, Atlas, Pandora and Prometheus, measuring between eight and 130 kilometers across, quite literally shepherd the ring particles, keeping them in their present orbits. Density waves, caused by the motion of shepherd moons within the rings, jostle and reshape the rings. Small moonlets are forming from ring particles that coalesce together. All this indicates that the rings are ephemeral. Every second up to 40 tons of ice from the rings rain down on Saturn’s atmosphere. That means the rings may last only several tens to hundreds of millions of years.
Could a time-traveling astronomer have seen the rings 100 million years ago? One indicator for the age of the rings is their dustiness. Objects exposed to the dust permeating our solar system for long periods of time grow dustier and darker.
Saturn’s rings are extremely bright and dust-free, seeming to indicate that they formed anywhere from 10 to 100 million years ago, if astronomers’ understanding of how icy particles gather dust is correct. One thing is for certain. The rings our time-traveling astronaut would have seen would have looked very different from the way they do today.
This story has been corrected to reflect that it was Christiaan Huygens, not Giovanni Cassini, who first suggested that Saturn had rings.
Wanda Jean Cowan, 58, of American Canyon, Calif., was arrested on Thursday, September 5, 2019, for possession of stolen property, kidnapping and child endangerment. Mendocino County Jail photo. NORTH COAST, Calif. – A Napa County woman was arrested on Thursday after authorities said she abducted a Clearlake woman’s child and also stole the woman’s vehicle.
Wanda Jean Cowan, 58, of American Canyon was arrested on Thursday evening, according to Sgt. James Wells of the Mendocino County Sheriff’s Office.
Wells said that at 5:25 p.m. Thursday deputies were dispatched to a possible stolen vehicle and child abduction at the Coyote Valley Casino in Redwood Valley.
When the deputies arrived at the scene they contacted a 40-year-old Clearlake woman who advised someone took her vehicle with her 16-month-old child inside it, Wells said.
The woman told deputies she had met the suspect, later identified as Wanda Cowan, the previous night and had traveled from Lake County to the Coyote Valley Casino on Thursday with her. Wells said that the woman reported that when she walked into the casino, Cowan left the area in her vehicle.
Wells said Cowan did not have permission to take the woman’s child or her vehicle from the casino area.
Deputies immediately issued a be on the lookout to surrounding law enforcement agencies for the vehicle and the child, Wells said.
Deputies were in the process of getting an AMBER Alert issued when Wells said a California Highway Patrol officer located the vehicle traveling on Highway 101 in Willits.
Wells said the CHP stopped the vehicle and the baby was located on the back seat, unrestrained.
The baby was not injured and was quickly reunited with her mother, Wells said.
Wells said Cowan was arrested for possession of stolen property, kidnapping and child endangerment.
Cowan was booked into the Mendocino County Jail without incident, where she was to be held in lieu of $250,000 bail, Wells said.