No. As of 4/18/11, all three eaglets are alive and well.
Their nest is located in Decorah, Iowa USA.
If you are referring to the Decorah Bald Eagles - Decorah is the name of the town in Iowa where the nest is.
The Decorah eagles nest in Decorah, Iowa at a fish hatchery that is a good source of fish for their food. There are also several streams and woodlands surrounding their nest for further sources of food. Their next is about 80 feet up in a tree top, which helps keep their babies safe from predators and interference from humans. The Iowa climate is a humid continental zone and generally has hot summers, cold winters, and wet springs. The eagles arrive in December to prepare the nest and to mate. Their eggs are laid in February and hatch in march. The eaglets fledge (take flight) in June and by July or August are no longer using the nest. The nest has no protection from the weather and all of the activities of the eagles is carried on in the rain, snow, and sleet. Eagles are very hardy birds.
They use the broken pieces of shell to line their nest. To observe (and listen in on) an Eagle's nest 24/7 in Decorah, Iowa, please click on the related link provided below:
I have listed the link to the Decorah, Iowa Eagle's nest camera at the related link below:
Usually by pulling strips of meat from their kill with the beak and then feeding it to the chicks. When the chicks get older, the kill is pretty much dumped in the nest for the chicks to feed themselves.
Eagles Nest Wilderness was created in 1978.
The area of Eagles Nest Wilderness is 537.851 square kilometers.
The parent eagles are approximately 8 years old. There were three eggs laid, 2/23, 2/26, and 3/2/11. The first egg hatched on 4/2/11; the second egg hatched on 4/3/11; and the third egg hatched on 4/6/11. This pair built this nest in 2007 and successfully hatched and fledged 2 eaglets in 2008, then 3 in 2009, and 3 more in 2010.
eagles use twigs, leaves, and mud to make there nest
Bald eagles will return to the old nest, add new material, year after year, until the nest falls from its own weight. They then will construct a new one.
Bald eagles do, but golden eagles prefer cliffs.