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Baby bald eagles will hatch on live webcam

An eagle's nest is being watched 24/7 for the hatching of the baby bald eagles.
An eagle's nest is being watched 24/7 for the hatching of the baby bald eagles.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Two new cameras positioned above eagles' nest provide clear window into eagle domestic life
  • Viewers will be able to see tiny cracks lacing through the eggs before they hatch
  • The eaglecam received more than 325,000 unique visitors from 125 countries last year
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(WIRED) -- Three bald eagles are expected to hatch in Decorah, Iowa, between March 30 and April 1 -- and you can watch it happen.

Two new cameras positioned above the eagles' nest provide an unprecedentedly clear window into eagle domestic life. The expectant parents built their nest 80 feet up a cottonwood tree near the Decorah Fish Hatchery in 2007, and all eight of their children have entered the world under a filmmaker's gaze.

But the new cameras, plus a computer upgrade, will bring a sharper view to more people than ever before. One camera runs automatically and streams footage of the nest 24/7, switching to infrared at night. The other is remotely controlled from a nearby equipment shed, where bird conservation expert Bob Anderson, executive director of the nonprofit Raptor Resource Project, will pan, tilt and zoom in on the nest.

According to Anderson, viewers will be able to see tiny cracks lacing through the eggs before they hatch. The zoomed-in view gets so close, you can count the scales on the eagles' feet.

The mother eagle laid the eggs on Feb. 23, Feb. 26 and March 2. All three were caught on camera and are up on YouTube.

The eaglecam received more than 325,000 unique visitors from 125 countries last year. All the attention maxed out the bandwidth of nearby Luther College, which had been hosting the site.

The eagle family made its cinematic debut in a 2008 PBS "Nature" documentary called "American Eagle."

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[TECH: NEWSPULSE]

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