View Full Version : Oxygen-poor sea may spark spate of shark bites
Benign Vanilla
August 4th 04, 05:35 PM
HOUSTON - A huge "dead zone" of water so devoid of oxygen that sea life
cannot live in it has spread across 5,800 square miles (15,000 square
kilometers) of the Gulf of Mexico this summer, in what has become an annual
occurrence caused by pollution.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5595098/
SVTKate
August 6th 04, 06:30 AM
Man, that is just horrible.
I think the thing that comes to mind the most is that they are doing nothing
to stop the pollution.
I wonder how many former US companies are contributing to the problem.
Kate
"Benign Vanilla" > wrote in message
...
| HOUSTON - A huge "dead zone" of water so devoid of oxygen that sea life
| cannot live in it has spread across 5,800 square miles (15,000 square
| kilometers) of the Gulf of Mexico this summer, in what has become an
annual
| occurrence caused by pollution.
|
| http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5595098/
|
|
Dances With Ferrets
August 6th 04, 05:01 PM
It's OK, as long as this country (the USA) just buries it's head in
the sand and keeps telling itself that we have no problems like
this... we have no incentive to change yet. It would take an
apocalyptic ecological disaster to make us pull our heads out of our
hind ends. But Noooooo, I'm not disenchanted. :)
Karen
August 7th 04, 02:52 AM
In article t>, "SVTKate"
> writes:
>I think the thing that comes to mind the most is that they are doing nothing
>to stop the pollution.
>
>I wonder how many former US companies are contributing to the problem.
>
>Kate
>
>"Benign Vanilla" > wrote in message
...
>| HOUSTON - A huge "dead zone" of water so devoid of oxygen that sea life
>| cannot live in it has spread across 5,800 square miles (15,000 square
>| kilometers) of the Gulf of Mexico this summer, in what has become an
>annual
>| occurrence caused by pollution.
the worst part is that there are several large sanctuaries down there Padre
Island coming to mind. a lot of the pollution is coming from the Mexican side
of the Rio Grande and don't forget all those platform wells out in the gulf off
Louisiana.
when I lived in Houston, there were days Galveston Beach was so bad you
couldn't swim in it.
Karen
Zone 5
Ashland, OH
http://hometown.aol.com/kmam1/MyPond/MyPond.html
My Art Studio at
http://members.aol.com/kmmstudios/K.M.Studios/K.M.Studios.html
for email remove the extra extention
Theoldballpark
August 7th 04, 03:17 PM
I live 30 miles from Galveston and haven't been down there in 14 years! Nasty
water-nuff said. Laura
jjp
August 9th 04, 08:04 PM
(Karen) wrote in message >...
> In article t>, "SVTKate"
> > writes:
>
> >I think the thing that comes to mind the most is that they are doing nothing
> >to stop the pollution.
> >
> >I wonder how many former US companies are contributing to the problem.
> >
> >Kate
> >
> >"Benign Vanilla" > wrote in message
> ...
> >| HOUSTON - A huge "dead zone" of water so devoid of oxygen that sea life
> >| cannot live in it has spread across 5,800 square miles (15,000 square
> >| kilometers) of the Gulf of Mexico this summer, in what has become an
> annual
> >| occurrence caused by pollution.
>
> the worst part is that there are several large sanctuaries down there Padre
> Island coming to mind. a lot of the pollution is coming from the Mexican side
> of the Rio Grande and don't forget all those platform wells out in the gulf off
> Louisiana.
>
> when I lived in Houston, there were days Galveston Beach was so bad you
> couldn't swim in it.
Apparently, Galveston is a lot nicer now than it was in the past.
Except for the sharks, which have migrated there to escape the
pollution of the dead zone off coastal Louisiana...
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