Monday, April 18, 2011

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Fun-RS Gold  Anything can be beautiful in some places, but certainly is not good everywhere, "said a researcher at the University of Georgia Samantha Joye, found dead patches of the seabed in oil shipments by the well where 11 men were arrested lost their lives. "Oil is not gone, just not where we can see. "

Joye, said before the oil spill, that would have given a A''note seabed "90. Now she gives him a 30. In general, Joye, who was one of the most practical for researchers to explore damage in the Gulf, said his health had declined from 80 before the release of a 50 now, but it was the most pessimistic of researchers.

In five expeditions, last December, she and her colleagues took 250 samples and seabed covered 2600 miles square. She said a lot of hidden oil in the water and the seabed has been chemically fingerprinted and assigned to the oil company BP. She also has pictures of oil flooded bottom-dwelling creatures like crabs and starfish - starfish creatures, as they usually bright orange, but now are pale and the dead.

This is in hiding. Eugene Turner, LSU scientist examined the wetlands and marshes of Louisiana's Barataria Basin, and found oil buried in the mud and sand.

"You can smell. It can not be seen. And 'Big Black this garbage out there, but it is there," says Turner.

At this stage, when the oil is the only clear a couple of places - the Bay Jimmy worst-hit. Today, oil continues to shell lines in the outer fringe of the marsh in the bay, a remote spot in deep visited the occasional fisherman and oil workers.

Still, it's nothing compared to the black gunk stuck on the shores and marshes of the summer, or multicolored patches so massive that you can track the satellite. These pictures and images of pelicans and seagulls with gobs of oil oozing down the beak, are now history.
rs gold is my favorite "Although some coastal areas were hit hard," says Lubchenco NOAA, "the oil does not penetrate as far into the swamp that people feared."

Despite the image on the surface, Dana Wetzel at Mote Marine Laboratory in Florida, added: "Whoever says that the Gulf is well .... It is precipitated out of sight, out of mind, but in my IMHO, it's not over. "

While money has poured BP for cleaning and immediate compensation, plus the bill for environmental damage and federal penalties are always calculated. The federal government is to collect data on this, but it is much kept outside researchers. Thus, some of the most important details are kept close to the cards in a game of high stakes poker, outside researchers say.

Trying to quantify the extent of damage to the ecosystem of the Gulf "is exactly the right question," said Robert Haddad, who heads the scientific process, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. "One result of the Exxon Valdez is that they have tried to assess the damage too fast."

Spill is nearly three months. Then there was the cleaning. Thus, federal officials said oil mainly - but not completely - gone, eaten by the spread of germs or chemicals diluted. Lubchenco told reporters in February that "it's not a contradiction to say that although most of the oil is gone, there is still oil out there."

Now, just a year later, scientists are beginning to see signs - and are far from conclusive - the long-term problems.

Florida State University oceanographer Ian MacDonald has warned his fellow scientists to be wary of the death of large mammals. It was in October. Since January, 155 young whales and dolphins and small fetus washed up on Gulf beaches - more than four times the usual number - according to NOAA.Cheap Cartier Gold Earrings

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