Farmer And 16 Cows Found Dead, Cause Of Death Finally Discovered’Check more in first comment..

A farmer and 16 of his cattle have died in a freak accident after a “deadly dome of air” formed in a Wisconsin farm’s manure holding tank.

According to WAOW, a 29-year-old farmer named Michael Biadasz, from Amherst, Wisconsin, died of gas poisoning on his family’s farm after being overcome by fumes

of either methane or sulfur oxide. Initially, 13 of the farm’s cattle died as well; later, three more expired, bringing the total to 16 cattle deaths.

The 29-year-old’s father, Bob Biadasz, co-owner of Biadasz Farms, said that the tragedy was the result of a “perfect storm” of unusual and unexpected weather conditions. When the tank was prepped to be pumped, warm upper air temperatures trapped the gases in a dome of air which then poisoned Michael and the cattle.

Biadasz was reportedly found dead when other workers arrived to begin hauling manure away from the tank.

“The family is devastated, absolutely devastated,” Portage County Coroner Scott Rifleman told WAOW.

Rifleman told WSAW that gas poisoning deaths typically occur in closed areas, making the incident even more surprising. The coroner said that atmospheric pressure prevented the gases from dissipating.

The coroner went on to say that an investigation is underway to determine exactly what caused Biadasz’s death. According to Rifleman, Biadasz had safely emptied the same tank hundreds of times prior to the fatal incident.

The Biadasz family honored Michael by parking a line of tractors and machinery along the road that passes the farm. Among the vehicles parked are a blue tractor, several red trucks, and Michael’s black pickup truck.

“As if there isn’t already enough danger in the lives of farmers, this family had to suffer this freak accident,” one Facebook user commented on the story. “So sad.”

Following the tragic accident, many are calling for tougher regulations to be placed on manure holding tanks to prevent a similar incident in the future. According to All That’s News, the National Agriculture Safety Database says that there should be proper ventilation in areas where animals are stored and that warning signs must be posted nearby.

“In addition to adhering to proper construction and maintenance procedures for liquid manure storage facilities,

owners should be encouraged to follow a few precautionary measures to protect both workers and livestock from harmful manure gases,” the NASD writes.

WASW reports that a similar unfortunate fate befell a Virginia family in 2007, when five of its members died as a result of a pipe blockage that caused a fatal buildup of methane gas.

Related Posts

10 Real-Life Stories With Twists So Stunning They May Give You Goosebumps

I’ve lived through some of the strangest, most jaw-dropping experiences that make you question reality. Once, I returned to my shared apartment after a short trip and…

My mom excluded me from the family WhatsApp dinner invitation. Her message was cold: “All my children are successful, except you. You chose to be a lowly teacher and I no longer see you as my daughter.” My siblings stayed silent. I didn’t beg or argue; I just moved away and vanished. Five years later, her neighbor called me nabbing: “Emily, your mother is desperate. The others have abandoned her.” She had no idea that the “lowly teacher” she publicly disowned was now the only person standing between her and a fate she never saw coming—and the tables were about to turn.

My phone buzzed against the hard laminate of my desk. It was a specific vibration pattern—two short, one long—that I had conditioned myself to dread. It was…

“My Son Turned Me Away While I Was in a Wheelchair — The Bank’s Reaction the Next Morning Changed Everything”

The wheelchair squeaked against the concrete as I rolled up to my son’s front door, my pride crumbling with each desperate push. Michael took one look at…

Calm Hero Frees Massive Black Bear Snagged in Old Wire Fence

In a snowy forest standoff, a brave guy approaches a roaring, tangled black bear and steadily tries to snip away the rusty wire coils with bolt cutters—…

I walked out of a billion-dollar deal to surprise my family—only to catch my new wife forcing my five-year-old to scrub a toilet. “She has to learn discipline,” she sneered. I threw her out on the spot. Then my daughter lifted her hollow eyes to mine and whispered, “That’s what she did to Mommy’s car… right before the accident.”

The silence in the Mitchell estate wasn’t peaceful; it was heavy. It was the specific, suffocating density of air that exists right before a thunderstorm breaks, or…

One car per house- See more below

When Jack and I moved into a short-term rental, our neighbor Lindsey wasted no time asserting control. She arrived with cookies and a warning: the HOA allowed…